FITNESS ASSAY AND ASSOCIATED METHODS

Abstract
The present invention provides an assay for determining the biochemical fitness of a biochemical species in a mutant replicating biological entity relative to its predecessor. The present invention further provides a continuous fluorogenic assay for measuring the anti-HIV protease activity of protease inhibitor. The present invention also provides a method of administering a therapeutic compound that reduces the chances of the emergence of drug resistance in therapy. The present invention also provides a compound of formula (I) or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt, a prodrug, a composition, or an ester thereof, wherein A is a group of formulas (A), (B), (C) or (D); R1, R2, R3, R5 or R6 is H, or an optionally substituted and/or heteroatom-bearing alkyl, alkenyl, alkynyl, or cyclic group; Y and/or Z are CH2, O, S, SO, SO2, amino, amides, carbamates, ureas, or thiocarbonyl derivatives thereof, optionally substituted with an alkyl, alkenyl, or alkynyl group; n is from 1 to 5; X is a bond, an optionally substituted methylene or ethylene, an amino, O or S; Q is C(O), C(S), or SO2; m is from 0 to 6; R4 is OH, ═O (keto), NH2, or alkylamino, including esters, amides, and salts thereof; and W is C(O), C(S), S(O), or SO2. Optionally, R5 and R6, together with the N—W bond of formula (I), comprise a macrocyclic ring.
Description
TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to a biochemical fitness assay and related methods.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The development of drug resistance is one of the most perplexing challenges in the field of medicine. One of the most common causes of drug failure in the treatment of diseases involving replicating biological entities, for example, cancer and infectious diseases, is the emergence of drug resistance. One of the most dramatic and tragic examples of drug resistance can be found in connection with the antiviral therapy of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS).


AIDS is a fatal disease, reported cases of which have increased dramatically within the past several years. Estimates of reported cases in the very near future also continue to rise dramatically.


The AIDS virus was first identified in 1983. It has been known by several names and acronyms. It is the third known T-lymphocyte virus (HTLV-III), and it has the capacity to replicate within cells of the immune system, causing profound cell destruction. The AIDS virus is a retrovirus, a virus that uses reverse transcriptase during replication. This particular retrovirus is also known as lymphadenopathy-associated virus (LAV), AIDS-related virus (ARV) and, most recently, as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Two distinct families of HIV have been described to date, namely HIV-1 and HIV-2. The acronym HIV will be used herein to refer to HIV viruses generically.


Specifically, HIV is known to exert a profound cytopathic effect on the CD4+ helper/inducer T-cells, thereby severely compromising the immune system. HIV infection also results in neurological deterioration and, ultimately, in the death of the infected individual.


The field of viral chemotherapeutics has developed in response to the need for agents effective against retroviruses, in particular HIV. For example anti-retroviral agents, such as 3′-azido-2′,3′-dideoxythymidine (AZT), 2′3′-dideoxycytidine (ddC), and 2′3′-dideoxyinosine (ddI) are known to inhibit reverse transcriptase. There also exist antiviral agents that inhibit transactivator protein. Nucleoside analogs, such as AZT, are currently available for antiviral therapy. Although very useful, the utility of AZT and related compounds is limited by toxicity and insufficient therapeutic indices for fully adequate therapy.


Retroviral protease inhibitors also have been identified as a class of anti-retroviral agents. Retroviral protease processes polyprotein precursors into viral structural proteins and replicative enzymes. This processing is essential for the assembly and maturation of fully infectious virions. Accordingly, the design of protease inhibitors remains an important therapeutic goal in the treatment of AIDS.


The use of HIV protease inhibitors, in combination with agents that have different antiretroviral mechanisms (e.g., AZT, ddI and ddT), also has been described. For example, synergism against HIV-1 has been observed between certain C2 symmetric HIV inhibitors and AZT (Kageyama et al., Antimicrob. Agents Chemother., 36, 926-933 (1992)).


Numerous classes of potent peptidic inhibitors of protease have been designed using the natural cleavage site of the precursor polyproteins as a starting point. These inhibitors typically are peptide substrate analogs in which the scissile P1—P1′ amide bond has been replaced by a non-hydrolyzable isostere with tetrahedral geometry (Moore et al, Perspect. Drug Dis. Design, 1, 85 (1993); Tomasselli et al., Int. J. Chem. Biotechnology, 6 (1991); Huff, J. Med. Chem., 34, 2305 (1991); Norbeck et al., Ann. Reports Med. Chem., 26, 141 (1991); and Meek, J. Enzyme Inhibition, 6, 65 (1992)). Although these inhibitors are effective in preventing the retroviral protease from functioning, the inhibitors suffer from some distinct disadvantages. Generally, peptidomimetics often make poor drugs, due to their potential adverse pharmacological properties, i.e., poor oral absorption, poor stability and rapid metabolism (Plattner et al, Drug Discovery Technologies, Clark et al., eds., Ellish Horwood, Chichester, England (1990)).


The design of the HIV-1 protease inhibitors based on the transition state mimetic concept has led to the generation of a variety of peptide analogs highly active against viral replication in vitro (Erickson et al, Science, 249, 527-533 (1990); Kramer et al., Science, 231, 1580-1584 (1986); McQuade et al., Science, 247, 454-456 (1990); Meek et al., Nature (London), 343, 90-92 (1990); and Roberts et al., Science, 248, 358-361 (1990)). These active agents contain a non-hydrolyzable, dipeptidic isostere, such as hydroxyethylene (McQuade et al., supra; Meek et al., Nature (London), 343, 90-92 (1990); and Vacca et al., J. Med. Chem., 34, 1225-1228 (1991)) or hydroxyethylamine (Ghosh et al., Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett., 8, 687-690 (1998); Ghosh et al., J. Med. Chem., 36, 292-295 (1993)); Rich et al., J. Med. Chem., 33, 1285-1288 (1990); and Roberts et al., Science, 248, 358-361 (1990)) as an active moiety that mimics the putative transition state of the aspartic protease-catalyzed reaction.


Two-fold (C2) symmetric inhibitors of HIV protease represent another class of potent HIV protease inhibitors, which were created by Erickson et al., on the basis of the three-dimensional symmetry of the enzyme active site (Erickson et al. (1990), supra). Typically, however, the usefulness of currently available HIV protease inhibitors in the treatment of AIDS has been limited by relatively short plasma half-life, poor oral bioavailability, and the technical difficulty of scale-up synthesis (Meek et al. (1992), supra).


In a continuing effort to address the problem of short plasma half-life and poor bioavailability, new HIV protease inhibitors have been identified. For example, HIV protease inhibitors incorporating the 2,5-diamino-3,4-disubstituted-1,6-diphenylhexane isostere are described in Ghosh et al., Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett., 8, 687-690 (1998) and U.S. Pat. No. 5,728,718 (Randad et al.). HIV protease inhibitors, which incorporate the hydroxyethylamine isostere, are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,502,060 (Thompson et al.), 5,703,076 (Talley et al.), and 5,475,027 (Talley et al.).


Recent studies, however, have revealed the emergence of mutant strains of HIV, in which the protease is resistant to the C2 symmetric inhibitors (Otto et al., PNAS USA, 90, 7543 (1993); Ho et al., J. Virology, 68, 2016-2020 (1994); and Kaplan et al., PNAS USA, 91, 5597-5601 (1994)). In one study, the most abundant mutation found in response to a C2 symmetry based inhibitor was Arg to Gln at position 8 (R8Q), which strongly affects the S3/S3, subsite of the protease binding domain. In this study, the shortening of the P3/P3, residues resulted in inhibitors that were equipotent towards both wild-type and R8Q mutant proteases (Majer et al., 13th American Peptide Symposium, Edmonton, Canada (1993)). Inhibitors have been truncated to P2/P2, without significant loss of activity (Lyle et al., J. Med. Chem., 34, 1230 (1991); and Bone et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 113, 9382 (1991)). These results suggest that inhibitors can be truncated and yet maintain the crucial interactions necessary for strong binding. The benefits of such an approach include the elimination of two or more peptide bonds, the reduction of molecular weight, and the diminishment of the potential for recognition by degradative enzymes.


More recently, new mutant strains of HIV have emerged that are resistant to multiple, structurally diverse, experimental and chemotherapeutic retroviral protease inhibitors. Such multidrug-resistant HIV strains are typically found in infected patients, who had undergone treatment with a combination of HIV protease inhibitors or a series of different HIV protease inhibitors. The number of reported cases of patients infected with multidrug-resistant HIV is rising dramatically. Tragically for these patients, the available options for AIDS chemotherapy and/or HIV management is severely limited or is, otherwise, completely nonexistent.


Drug resistance is unfortunately the most common reason for drug failures generally. One of the most dramatic examples of drug failure due to resistance is in HIV therapy. Once HIV resistance is obtained to first-line therapy, the chances of future success are greatly diminished because of the development of multidrug cross resistance. Other diseases involving infectious agents (e.g., viruses, bacteria, protozoa, and prions) or other disease-causing cells (e.g., tumor cells) present similar challenges in that drug resistance is a primary cause of drug failure.


In view of the foregoing problems, there exists a need to determine whether a mutant will be capable of replicating in the presence of a drug. There also exists a need for a method of predicting whether drug resistance is likely to emerge in a disease involving a replicating biological entity. There is also a need for a method of devising a long-term therapeutic regimen that minimizes the likelihood that resistance will occur in a disease involving a replicating biological entity. Moreover, there is a need for a method of preventing or inhibiting the development of drug resistance in such diseases.


The present invention provides such methods. These and other advantages of the present invention, as well as additional inventive features, will be apparent from the description of the invention provided herein.


BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention is predicated on the surprising and unexpected discovery that biochemical “vitality,” as described below, can be used to determine the biological fitness of a mutant replicating biological entity relative to its predecessor under the selection pressure of an inhibitor. The present invention provides an assay for determining the biochemical fitness of a biochemical target (i.e., a biomolecule having a biochemical function), of a mutant replicating biological entity relative to its predecessor's biochemical target, in the presence of a compound that acts upon the biochemical target. The assay method of the present invention includes obtaining the predecessor, determining the biochemical vitality of the biochemical target of both the predecessor and the mutant in the presence of a compound that acts upon the biochemical target of the predecessor, and comparing the vitality of the mutant's biochemical target relative to the vitality of the predecessor's biochemical target. Where the biochemical vitality of the mutant is greater than the biochemical fitness of the predecessor, the mutant is predicted to be more biologically fit in the presence of the compound. The assay method can thus be used to predict the emergence of drug resistance for a particular replicating biological entity (e.g., a disease-causing cell) in the presence a drug (e.g., an inhibitor). Utilization of the assay in accordance with the present invention permits the administration of an inhibitor or combination of inhibitors to treat a disease in a way that decreases the likelihood that drug resistance will develop.


The present invention further provides a continuous fluorogenic assay for measuring the anti-HIV protease activity of a protease inhibitor. The continuous fluorogenic assay of the present invention utilizes a substrate of the formula Ala-Arg-Val-Tyr-Phe(NO2)-Glu-Ala-Nle-NH2. The continuous fluorogenic assay of the present invention is highly sensitive and particularly useful for the prediction of the antiviral inhibitory activity of a compound against mutant HIV.


The present invention further provides a method of administering a therapeutic compound that inhibits a biochemical target of a disease-causing replicating biological entity. The therapeutic compound, when administered in accordance with the method of the present invention, minimizes the chances that the disease-causing entity will develop drug resistance. As such, the method of administering a therapeutic compound in accordance with the present invention improves the chances of long-term success in therapy.


The present method of administering a therapeutic compound involves the identification of at least one mutant replicating biological entity (the mutant) capable of evolving from the disease-causing replicating biological entity (the predecessor). Biochemical fitness is determined by comparing the biochemical vitality of the mutant's biochemical target with the biochemical vitality of the predecessor's biochemical target. Biochemical fitness is determined in the presence of a drug (e.g, an inhibitor). The biochemical vitality of the mutant's biochemical target is compared to biochemical vitality of the predecessor's biochemical target in the presence of the drug. When there are two or more drugs available for treatment, biochemical fitness can be determined for each drug in accordance with the present invention. A therapeutic compound is then administered from among one of the compounds that produces a lower value for biochemical fitness with respect to one or more mutants. Administration of a therapeutic compound producing a lower fitness value for a particular mutant indicates that the predecessor is less likely to develop resistance in the presence of that compound.


The present invention also provides a method of preventing the development of drug resistance of HIV in an HIV-infected mammal by the administration of a drug resistance-inhibiting effective amount of a compound of the formula:




embedded image


or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt, a prodrug, or an ester thereof, or a pharmaceutical composition thereof, wherein:


A is a group of the formula:




embedded image


R1 is H or an alkyl, an alkenyl, an alkynyl, a cycloalkyl, a cycloalkylalkyl, an aryl, an aralkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkylalkyl, a heteroaryl, or a heteroaralkyl radical, which unsubstituted or substituted;


Y and Z are the same or different and are each selected from the group consisting of CH, O, S, SO, SO2, NR8, R8C(O)N, R8C(S)N, R8OC(O)N, R8OC(S)N, R8SC(O)N, R8R8NC(O)N, and R9R9NC(S)N, wherein R8 and R9 are each H, an alkyl, an alkenyl, or an alkynyl;


n is an integer from 1 to 5;


X is a covalent bond, CHR10, CHR10CH2, CH2CHR10, O, NR10, or S, wherein R10 is H, an alkyl, an alkenyl, or an alkynyl;


Q is C(O), C(S), or SO2;


R2 is H, an alkyl, an alkenyl, or an alkynyl;


m is an integer from 0 to 6;


R3 is a cycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, an aryl, or a heteroaryl which is unsubstituted or substituted;


R4 is OH, ═O (keto), NH2, or a derivative thereof;


R5 is H, a C1-C6 alkyl radical, a C2-C6 alkenyl radical, or (CH2)qR14, wherein q is an integer form 0 to 5, and R14 is a cycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, an aryl, or a heteroaryl which is unsubstituted or substituted;


W is C(O), C(S), S(O), or SO2; and


R6 is a cycloalkyl, heterocycloalkyl, aryl, or heteroaryl which is unsubstituted or substituted. Optionally, R5 and R6, together with the N—W bond of formula (I), comprise a macrocyclic ring which can contain at least one additional heteroatom in the ring skeleton.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 illustrates the synthesis of a particular sulfonamide isostere core of a compound of the present invention.



FIG. 2 illustrates the synthesis of a bis-tetrahydrofuran ligand and the optical resolution thereof.



FIG. 3A illustrates the synthesis of a compound of the present invention via coupling of a bis-tetrahydrofuran ligand to a sulfonamide isostere of the present invention.



FIG. 3B illustrates the synthesis of a compound of the present invention via coupling of a bis-tetrahydrofuran ligand to a sulfonamide isostere of the present invention.



FIG. 4 illustrates generally the present method of synthesizing a compound of the present invention.



FIGS. 5A-5D illustrate the structures of particular compounds that were tested against various drug resistant HIV mutants.





DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

The present invention is predicated on the surprising and unexpected discovery to that the “vitality” of a biochemical target of a mutant replicating biological entity relative to that of its predecessor's biochemical target can be used to predict the biological fitness of the mutant under the selection pressure of an inhibitor of the biochemical target. The “vitality” of a biochemical target of a mutant replicating biological entity relative to the “vitality” of its predecessor's biochemical target is defined herein as the “biochemical fitness.”


“Vitality” as utilized herein describes the ability of a particular biomolecular “target” (i.e., a biochemical species intended to be inhibited by particular inhibitor) to perform its biochemical function in the presence of the inhibitor. Biochemical vitality is a function of at least two variables: the ability of a particular inhibitor to inhibit a biochemical target of the replicating biological entity in question, and the ability of the cell's biochemical target to inherently perform its biochemical function (irrespective of an inhibitor). Biochemical vitality also can include other factors that effect the ability of a biochemical target to perform its biochemical function in the presence of the inhibitor.


The biochemical target in question can include, for example, a biochemical species with one or more known or unknown biological functions. The biochemical target can be, for example, a biochemical species having one or more specific biochemical function, or it can be a biochemical species that effects or influences a biochemical function directly or indirectly. Suitable biochemical targets include, for example, enzymes, proteins, oligomers, receptors, and the like. Suitable enzymes include, for example, reverse transcriptases, proteases (e.g., retroviral proteases, plasmepsins, and the like), methylases, oxidases, esterases, acyl transferases, and the like. Suitable enzymes also include, for example, viral and non-viral helicases, topoisomerases, DNA gyrases, DNA and RNA polymerases, parasite-encoded proteases, and the like.


Suitable proteins include, for example, proteins that incorporate a conformational change as a major functional requirement, and the like. Examples of such proteins include HIV gp41 and other fusogenic viral proteins and peptides, topoisomerases, and all DNA enzymes, and the like.


Suitable oligomers include, for example, oligomers that require oligomerization in order to perform their biochemical function. Examples of such oligomers include HIV protease, retroviral fusion proteins, peptides, HIV gp 41, viral and non-viral membrane fusion proteins, tumor suppressor proteins (e.g., p53, and the like) prions, ribosomes, and the like.


The ability of a particular inhibitor to inhibit a biochemical target of a particular replicating biological entity can be determined by any suitable method and/or can be obtained from any suitable source. The ability of a particular inhibitor to inhibit a biochemical function of a replicating biological entity can be determined, for example, on the basis of a measurable property, or a measurable relationship of properties, that correlate with the ability of the inhibitor to inhibit the target. Suitable methods for determining the ability of the inhibitor to inhibit the target include, for example, assays, and the like. In some instances, the ability of the inhibitor to inhibit the target can be obtained from one or more suitable sources, for example, assay data from a database, a textbook, or the literature.


When the biochemical target is a protein, the ability of an inhibitor to inhibit the protein can be determined, for example, by obtaining the equilibrium dissociation constant (Kd) of drug binding to the target where drug binding interferes with the function of the protein.


When the biochemical target is an enzyme, the ability of an inhibitor to inhibit the enzyme can be determined, for example, by obtaining the inhibition constant (Kith), or the like. The inhibition constant can be in terms of drug inhibition constant for the effect of the drug on substrate catalysis (e.g., Ki) or dissociation constant for drug binding (e.g., Kd) where drug binding correlates with inhibition of enzyme function.


When the biochemical target is an oligomer, the ability of an inhibitor to inhibit the oligomer can be determined, for example, by obtaining the equilibrium dissociation constant (Kd) for drug binding where drug binding interferes with oligomerization of the target.


Where the biochemical target is a protein that requires a conformational change for its function, the ability of an inhibitor to inhibit the conformational change can be determined, for example, by obtaining the equilibrium dissociation constant (Kd) for drug binding where drug binding interferes with the conformational change of the target.


When the biochemical target is a protein that is required to bind to a ligand, macromolecule, or macromolecular complex to perform its biochemical function, the ability of an inhibitor to inhibit the protein function can be determined by obtaining the equilibrium dissociation constant (Kd) for drug binding where drug binding interferes with ligand binding, macromolecule binding, or macromolecular complex binding.


When the biochemical target is a nucleic acid binding protein, the ability of an inhibitor to inhibit the nucleic acid binding protein's function can be determined by obtaining the equilibrium dissociation constant (Kd) for drug binding where drug binding interferes with nucleic acid binding.


Vitality also is a function of the biochemical target's ability to inherently perform its biochemical function (irrespective of an inhibitor). The biochemical target's ability to inherently perform its biochemical function can be determined by any suitable method and/or can be obtained from any suitable source. The biochemical target's ability to inherently perform its biochemical function can be determined, for example, on the basis of a measurable property, or measurable relationship of properties, that correlate with the ability of the biochemical target's ability to inherently perform its biochemical function. Suitable methods for determining the biochemical target's ability to inherently perform its biochemical function include, for example, biochemical assays, and the like. In some instances, the ability of a cell's biochemical target to inherently perform its biochemical function can be obtained from one or more suitable sources, for example, assay data from a database, a textbook, or the literature.


When the biochemical target is an enzyme, the ability of the enzyme to inherently perform its biochemical function can be determined, for example, by determining the catalytic efficiency of the enzyme. For example, the catalytic efficiency for enzymes that exhibit Michaelis-Menten kinetics can be determined by obtaining the kcat/KM ratio, or by a similar method, wherein kcat is the catalytic rate and KM is the Michaelis constant.


When the biochemical target is a protein, the ability of the protein to inherently perform its biochemical function can be determined, for example, by obtaining the equilibrium constant (Keq) for the biochemical function of the protein, or the like.


When the biochemical target is an oligomer, the ability of an inhibitor to perform its biological function can be determined, for example, by obtaining the equilibrium constant (Keq) that is associated with oligomerization.


Where the biochemical target is a protein that requires a conformational change for its function, the ability of the target to perform its function can be determined, for example, by obtaining the equilibrium constant (Keq) associated with conformational change.


When the biochemical target is a protein that is required to bind to a ligand to perform its function, the ability of the target to perform its function can be determined, for example, by obtaining the equilibrium dissociation constant (Kd) for ligand binding.


When the biochemical target is a nucleic acid binding protein, the ability of an inhibitor to perform its function can be determined by obtaining the equilibrium dissociation constant (Kd) for nucleic acid binding.


It will be appreciated that vitality also can be a function of other factors that effect the ability of a biochemical target to perform its biochemical function in the presence of the inhibitor. If the biochemical target is a dimeric species, for example, other factors that influence biochemical vitality might include the ability of the species to dimerize in the presence and/or in the absence of the inhibitor. If, by way of example, a mutation causes the dimerization rate to become a factor in the biochemical function of the biochemical target of the mutant relative to its predecessor's, then dimerization rate can be included in the vitality determination.


The biochemical vitalities of a mutant replicating biological entity and its predecessor, when compared, describes the biochemical fitness of the target of the mutant cell. In keeping with the invention, it has been found that the biochemical fitness relates to the biological fitness of the mutant in the presence of the inhibitor. When the value for the biochemical vitality of the target of the mutant exceeds the value for the biochemical vitality of the target of a predecessor of the mutant, the target of the mutant has greater biochemical fitness in the presence of the inhibitor. In such cases, the mutant replicating biological entity is favored over the predecessor and resistance to the inhibitor that is used to treat the predecessor is likely to develop.


Biochemical vitality can be determined in many different ways that suitably relate the various factors relating to the biochemical vitality of the target. For example, a mathematical function may be used to relate the various factors. By way of illustration, when the biochemical target is an enzyme, the vitality can be determined as a function of Kith (e.g., Ki or Kd) and enzymatic or catalytic efficiency (e.g., Kcat/Km). Vitality can be determined as the product of Kinh and enzymatic efficiency, for example, (Kith)×(catalytic efficiency), or (Ki)×(catalytic efficiency) or (Kd) (catalytic efficiency). Alternatively, vitality can be determined, for example, as the log of the product of Kinh and enzymatic efficiency, for example, log [(Kinh)×(catalytic efficiency)], or log [(Ki)×(catalytic efficiency)] or log [(Kd)×(catalytic efficiency)]. Similarly, for enzymes that exhibit Michaelis-Menten kinetics, vitality can be determined as a function of Kinh (e.g., Ki or Kd) and the kcat/KM ratio. For example, vitality can be determined as the product of Kinh and kcat/KM e.g., (Kinh)×(kcat/KM), wherein Kinh is Ki or Kd. Alternatively, vitality can be determined, for example, as the log of the product of kinh and kcat/Km, e.g., log [(Kinh)×(kcat/KM)], wherein Kinh is Ki or Kd. In a preferred embodiment, the biochemical target is an enzyme and the vitality is (Ki)×(kcat/KM), or log [(Ki)×(kcat/KM)].


“Fitness,” unless otherwise indicated, means biochemical fitness. “Biochemical fitness” as utilized herein is a value that represents the vitality of a biochemical target of a mutant replicating biological entity relative to the vitality the biochemical target of its predecessor. Biochemical fitness is determined by comparing the vitality of a biochemical target of a mutant replicating biological entity relative to that of its predecessor. Any suitable comparison of the vitality of a biochemical target of a mutant replicating biological entity relative to that of its predecessor can be used in the determination of fitness. For example, biochemical fitness can be determined as the difference between the biochemical vitality of a biochemical target of a predecessor (biochemical vitalitypred) and the biochemical vitality of the biochemical target of a particular mutant replicating biological entity that can evolve from the predecessor (biochemical vitalitymut), e.g., (biochemical vitalitymut)-(biochemical vitalitypred). If biochemical fitness is determined on the basis of this difference, then a positive value indicates that the mutant has a higher fitness relative to its predecessor in the presence of the inhibitor, whereas a negative value indicates that the mutant is less fit relative to its predecessor. A value of zero indicates that the fitness of the mutant and the predecessor are equal. A higher positive value indicates a greater chance that resistance to the inhibitor will emerge, whereas a higher negative value indicates a lower chance that resistance to the inhibitor will emerge.


Alternatively, and preferably, fitness can be determined as the quotient of two biochemical vitalities, for example, as the quotient of a biochemical target of a particular mutant replicating biological entity and the biochemical vitality of the biochemical target of a predecessor, e.g.,






fitness
=



vitality
mut


vitality
pred


.





If fitness is determined on the basis of this quotient, then a value greater than one indicates that the mutant has a higher fitness relative to its predecessor, in the presence of the inhibitor. A value of one indicates that the fitness of the mutant and the predecessor are equal. A value less than one indicates that the mutant is less fit relative to its predecessor. A higher value indicates a greater chance that resistance to the inhibitor/drug will emerge, whereas a lower value indicates a lower chance that resistance to the inhibitor/drug will emerge. A value less than one indicates that the mutant will not emerge in the presence of the inhibitor/drug.


Alternatively, fitness can be determined as the log of the quotient of two biochemical vitalities, for example, as the log of the quotient of a biochemical target of a particular mutant replicating biological entity and the biochemical vitality of the biochemical target of a predecessor, e.g.,






fitness
=


log


[


vitality
mut


vitality
pred


]


.





If fitness is determined on the basis of this log, then a value greater than zero indicates that the mutant has a higher fitness relative to its predecessor, in the presence of the inhibitor. A negative value indicates that the mutant is less fit relative to its predecessor. A value of zero indicates that the fitness of the mutant and the predecessor are equal. A higher positive value indicates a greater chance that resistance to the inhibitor/drug will emerge, whereas a lower positive value indicates a lower chance that resistance to the inhibitor/drug will emerge. A negative value indicates that the mutant will not emerge in the presence of the inhibitor/drug.


Fitness can be determined in the presence of any suitable compound that inhibits a biochemical target from performing its biological function. The inhibitor, for example, can be a compound that inhibits an enzyme. Suitable enzyme inhibitors include, for example, protease inhibitors, reverse transcriptase inhibitors, DNA polymerase inhibitors, methylase inhibitors, oxidase inhibitors, esterase inhibitors, acyl transferase inhibitors, and the like.


Suitable protease inhibitors include, for example, viral protease inhibitors, plasmepsin inhibitors, and cathepsin D inhibitors. In a preferred embodiment, the inhibitor is a viral protease inhibitor, more preferably a retroviral protease inhibitor, still more preferably an HIV-1 or an HIV-2 protease inhibitor, and most preferably and HIV-1 protease inhibitor. Exemplary HIV-1 protease inhibitors include, for example, saquinavir, ritonavir, indinavir, nelfinavir, amprenavir, and HIV-1 protease inhibitors that are undergoing clinical trials, e.g., tipranavir (PNU-140690).


Suitable plasmepsin inhibitors include, for example, inhibitors of plasmepsin I or II, including inhibitors of plasmepsin I or II that have antimalarial activity. Suitable inhibitors of cathepsin D include, for example, cathepsin D inhibitors that inhibit cathepsin D in primary breast cancer tissues, including cathepsin D inhibitors that inhibit cathepsin D in primary breast cancer tissues and would be expected to lower the risk of metastasis and/or shorter relapse-free survival in breast cancer patients. See, e.g., Gulnik et al., J. Mol. Biol., 227, 265-270 (1992).


Suitable reverse transcriptase inhibitors include, for example, retroviral reverse transcriptase inhibitors, e.g., AZT, 3TC, ddI, ddC, D4T, and the like.


Suitable protein inhibitors include, for example, compounds that inhibit a conformational change in a protein, and the like. Suitable oligomerization inhibitors include, for example, T-20 peptide inhibitor of HIV-1 fusion and other compounds that inhibit oligomers from oligomerizing on a cell surface or within a cell membrane.


In accordance with the present invention, fitness in the presence of an inhibitor can be determined for a biological entity that produces or includes a biological target of the inhibitor. The biological entity is preferably a replicating biological entity, for example, a virus, a parasite, or a cell, preferably a disease-causing cell. Disease-causing replicating biological entities include, for example, tumor cells, cancer cells, and infectious organisms (e.g., fungi, protozoa, bacteria, and the like) and prions.


Cancer cells include, for example, cells associated with breast cancer, colon cancer, lung cancer, and the like. Fitness can be determined for a rapidly growing tumor cell.


Fungi include, for example, candida albicans, and the like. Protozoa include, for example, trypanosome species, schistosomial species, malarial protozoa, e.g., Plasmodium species. Plasmodium species include, for example, Plasmodium Falciparum, Plasmodium ovale, Plasmodium vivax, Plasmodium malariae, and the like. Bacteria include, for example, Helicobacter pylori, Escherichia coli, Salmonella, Streptococcus pyogenes, Staphylococcus aureas, Bacillus anthrax, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Hemophilus influenza, and the like. Viruses include, for example, retroviruses (e.g., HIV-1 and HIV-2), herpes viruses, cytomegaloviruses, influenza viruses, epstein-barr virus (EBV), Kaposi's sarcoma herpes virus (KSHV), varicella-zoster virus (VZV), human papillomavirus (HPV), echovirus, picornaviruses, rhinoviruses, poliovirus, coxsackie virus, measles, mumps, human T-cell leukemia virus (HTLV-1), rubella, rotaviruses, yellow fever virus, ebola virus, and other pathogenic viruses, and the like.


Replicating biological entities also include multicellular organisms, for example, infectious microorganisms, e.g., helminths. Helminths include, for example, hookworms (e.g., ancylostoma duodenale) strongyloides stercoralis, fasciola hepatica, trichuris trichiura, trichinella spiralis, taenia solium, taenia saginata, and the like.


It is believed that drug resistance is the evolutionary result of fitness-based selection of mutant cells/microorganisms in the presence of a drug (or any compound that has biological activity). In accordance with the present invention, the emergence (or non-emergence) of drug resistance in a disease caused by a disease-causing replicating biological entity can be predicted by determining the fitness of a biochemical target of a mutant in the presence of the drug. Thus, the emergence (or non-emergence) of drug resistance can be predicted on the basis of biochemical fitness. While resistance profiles may, in some instances, reflect fitness, it cannot be assumed that the emergence of drug resistance for a particular mutant can be directly predicted on the basis of its resistance profile alone.


The present invention thus provides an assay that can be used to predict the biological fitness of a replicating biological entity in the presence of a particular inhibitor. In a preferred embodiment, an assay is provided for determining the biochemical fitness of a biochemical target of a mutant replicating biological entity relative to its predecessor. In accordance with the assay of the present invention, a predecessor to the mutant is obtained, the biochemical vitality of the biochemical target of the predecessor in the presence of a compound capable of inhibiting the biochemical target of the predecessor is determined, the biochemical vitality of the biochemical target of the mutant in the presence of the compound is determined, and the biochemical vitality of the biochemical target of the mutant relative to the biochemical vitality of the biochemical target of the predecessor are compared.


The assay can be used with a wide variety of infectious microorganisms, as described above, including, for example, a virus, a fungus, a protozoa, or bacterium, a retrovirus, including HIV-1 or HIV-2, and cancer cells. When the infectious microorganism is a protozoa, it is preferably a malarial parasite, which is more preferably a plasmodium species.


In another embodiment, the predecessor is a cancer cell, which is preferably a rapidly growing tumor cell, for example, a rapidly growing cancer cell found in breast cancer, colon cancer, lung cancer, a tumor cell of a lymphoid origin, a tumor-derived cell with a high metastatic potential, or the like.


The assay of the present invention can be applied to any suitable biochemical target, preferably a biochemical target whose biochemical vitality can be determined using measurable properties that can be obtained by assay. Desirably, the biochemical target is one that plays an important role in the replication and growth of the entity. By way of example, the biochemical target of the predecessor (and the mutant) can be an enzyme and the compound can be an inhibitor of the enzyme of the predecessor.


The enzyme can be a viral enzyme. Illustrative of viral enzymes are a viral protease enzyme, a viral reverse transcriptase, a viral integrase, a viral polymerase, a viral protein with enzymatic activity, or a retroviral enzyme, including an HIV-1 or an HIV-2 enzyme. Viral protease enzymes, include a retroviral protease, such as an HIV-1 protease or an HIV-2 protease. Viral integrase enzymes include, for example, HIV-1 integrase, HIV-2 integrase, and the like. Viral polymerase can be a retroviral polymerase, including an HIV-1 polymerase or an HIV-2 polymerase. A viral protein with enzymatic activity can be a retroviral protein, such as an HIV-1 protein or an HIV-2 protein.


The enzyme also can be a protozoal enzyme, including a protozoal protease enzyme. The protozoal protease can be a malarial protease. The malarial protease can be a plasmepsin, including plasmepsin I or plasmepsin II. The malarial enzyme can also be a plasmodial enzyme or a protein with enzymatic activity.


In yet another embodiment, the biochemical target of the predecessor is an oligomer and the compound inhibits the oligomerization of the oligomer of the predecessor. In yet another embodiment, the biochemical target of the predecessor is a protein and the compound inhibits a conformational change in the protein of the predecessor.


The biochemical vitality determination can also take into account other factors, preferably measurable factors, that effect the ability of a biochemical target to perform its biochemical function in the presence of the inhibitor. When the biochemical target is an enzyme and the compound is an enzyme inhibitor, the biochemical vitality of the enzyme of the mutant replicating biological entity preferably corresponds to Kinh-mut, kcat-mut, KM-mut, and the biochemical vitality of the enzyme of the predecessor preferably corresponds to Kinh-pred, kcat-pred, and KM-ored. Kin, is an inhibition constant of the compound, kcat is the biochemical catalytic rate, and KM is the Michaelis constant. More preferably, the vitality of the enzyme corresponds to Kith, kcat and KM, and the biochemical vitality of the enzyme of the mutant replicating biological entity is defined by the relationship Kinh-mut(Kcat-mut/KM-mut) (i.e., (Kinh-mut)×(Kcat-mut/KM-mut)) and the biochemical vitality of the enzyme of the predecessor is defined by the relationship Kinh-pred(kcat-pred/KM-pred). The variables Kinh-mut, Kinh-pred, kcat-mut, kcat-pred, KM-mut, and KM-pred can be obtained by any suitable means, and are preferably obtained by measurement (e.g., from an assay). When vitality is determined on the basis of these relationships, biochemical fitness in the presence of a given inhibitor/drug preferably is defined by the equation:









K

inh
-
mut




(


k

cat
-
mut


/

K

M
-
mut



)




K

inh
-
pred




(


k

cat
-
pred


/

K

M
-
pred



)



,
or







log


[



K

inh
-
mut




(


k

cat
-
mut


/

K

M
-
mut



)




K

inh
-
pred




(


k

cat
-
pred


/

K

M
-
pred



)



]


.




Kinh can be determined by any suitable means, but typically is determined on the basis of Ki or Kd.


The present invention also provides a method of administering a therapeutic compound, which method increases the chances of successful long-term therapy. In a preferred embodiment, the present invention provides a method of administering a therapeutic compound that inhibits a biochemical target of a replicating disease-causing replicating biological entity (disease causing predecessor), including identifying at least one mutant capable of evolving from the disease-causing predecessor. A first biochemical vitality of the biochemical target of the disease-causing predecessor in the presence of a first compound capable of inhibiting the biochemical target of the disease-causing predecessor, and a first biochemical vitality of the biochemical target of the mutant in the presence of the first compound, are determined.


Additional biochemical vitalities of the biochemical target of the disease-causing replicating biological entity in the presence of additional compounds capable of inhibiting the biochemical target of the disease-causing cell, and additional biochemical vitalities of the biochemical target of the mutant in the presence of the additional compounds, are also determined.


Fitnesses in the presence of different inhibitors/drugs can be compared and a therapeutic compound administered on the basis of the comparison. A first biochemical fitness of the biochemical target of the mutant relative to the disease-causing predecessor is determined by comparing the first biochemical vitality of the biochemical target of the mutant with the first biochemical vitality of the biochemical target of the disease-causing predecessor, and a second biochemical fitness of the biochemical target of the mutant relative to the disease-causing replicating biological entity is determined by comparing the second biochemical vitality of the biochemical target of the mutant with the second biochemical vitality of the biochemical target of the disease-causing replicating biological entity. Additional biochemical fitness determinations can be made in the presence of additional compounds. The biochemical fitness values for one or more mutants in the presence of each compound are compared. A therapeutic compound is then administered from among the first and the additional compound(s), which therapeutic compound produces the lowest biochemical fitness values.


In accordance with the method of the present invention, the replicating disease-causing replicating biological entity is less likely to develop resistance in the presence of the therapeutic compound. The therapeutic compound can be administered from among any particular set of compounds, which can have the same biochemical target or different biochemical targets with respect to each other. The method of administering a compound in accordance with the present invention is, therefore, not limited to comparing fitness in the presence of compounds that act on the same biochemical target.


In one embodiment, the disease-causing replicating biological entity is an infectious microorganism, for example, a virus, a fungus, a protozoa, or a bacterium, more preferably a virus or a protozoa. When the infectious microorganism is a virus, it is preferably a retrovirus, which is more preferably HIV-1 or HIV-2, and most preferably HIV-1. When the infectious microorganism is a protozoa, it is preferably a malarial parasite, which is more preferably a plasmodium species.


In another embodiment, the disease-causing replicating biological entity is a cancer cell, which is preferably a rapidly growing tumor cell, for example, a rapidly growing cancer cell found in breast cancer, colon cancer, lung cancer, or the like.


The method of administering a compound in accordance with the present invention can be applied to any suitable biochemical target, preferably a biochemical target whose biochemical vitality can be determined using measurable properties that can be obtained by assay. In one embodiment, the biochemical target of the predecessor (and the mutant) is an enzyme and the compound inhibits an enzyme of the predecessor. The enzyme can be any enzyme whose biochemical vitality can be measured including, for example, an enzyme described herein in connection with the fitness assay of the present invention.


In another embodiment, the biochemical target of the disease-causing replicating biological entity is an oligomer and the compound inhibits the oligomerization of the oligomer of the predecessor. In yet another embodiment, the biochemical target of the disease-causing replicating biological entity is a protein and the compound inhibits a conformational change in the protein of the predecessor.


The biochemical vitality can be determined in any suitable manner. For example, vitality can be determined as described herein, e.g., as described in connection with the assay of the present invention.


When an infectious microorganism is tested in accordance with the assay of the present invention, the predecessor can be a wild-type species, or the predecessor can itself be a mutant species. In a particularly preferred embodiment, the predecessor is a retrovirus, which is more preferably a wild-type HIV-1 or HIV-2 strain, most preferably HIV-1. When the predecessor is a wild-type HIV strain, the mutant replicating biological entity preferably has at least one mutation in the biochemical target thereof. When the predecessor has at least one mutation in the biochemical target thereof, the mutant preferably has at least two mutations in the biochemical target thereof.


Similarly, when the method of administering a therapeutic compound in accordance with the present invention is used in connection with an infectious microorganism, the disease-causing replicating biological entity can be a wild-type species, or the disease-causing entity can itself be a mutant species. In a particularly preferred embodiment, the disease-causing replicating biological entity is a retrovirus, which is more preferably a wild-type HIV-1 or HIV-2 strain, most preferably HIV-1. When the disease-causing replicating biological entity is a wild-type HIV strain, the mutant preferably has at least one mutation in the biochemical target thereof. When the disease-causing replicating biological entity has at least one mutation in the biochemical target thereof, the mutant preferably has at least two mutations in the biochemical target thereof.


When the predecessor or the disease-causing replicating biological entity in the assay of the present invention, or in the method of administering a compound in accordance with the present invention, is a wild-type HIV strain, the biochemical target of the mutant preferably has at least one active site mutation. When the predecessor in the assay of the present invention has at least one mutation, and the mutant replicating biological entity has at least two mutations, the biochemical target of the predecessor or of the mutant preferably has at least one active site mutation. When the disease-causing replicating biological entity in the method of the present invention has at least one mutation in the biochemical target thereof, and the mutant has at least two mutations in the biochemical target thereof, the biochemical target of the disease-causing entity or of the mutant preferably has at least one active site mutation.


The present invention further provides a continuous fluorogenic assay for measuring the anti-HIV protease activity of a protease inhibitor, which method comprises adding a solution of HIV protease to a substrate stock solution, in which the substrate has the formula Ala-Arg-Val-Tyr-Phe(NO2)-Glu-Ala-Nle-NH2, to provide a substrate reaction solution. The fluorescence of the substrate reaction solution is then measured at specified time intervals. The solution of HIV protease is then added to a solution of the protease inhibitor and the substrate stock solution, to provide an inhibitor-substrate reaction solution. The fluorescence of the inhibitor-substrate reaction solution is then measured at specified time intervals. The initial velocity of the inhibitor-substrate reaction solution is then calculated by applying the equation: V=V0/2Et({[Ki(l+S/Km)+It−Et]2+4Ki(l+S/Km)Et}1/2−[Ki((l+S/Km)+It−Et]), wherein V is the initial velocity of the inhibitor reaction solution, V0 is the initial velocity of the substrate reaction solution, Km is the Michaelis-Menten constant, S is the substrate concentration, Et is the protease concentration, and It is the inhibitor concentration.


The assay method described herein is highly sensitive and particularly useful for the prediction of the antiviral inhibitory activity of a compound against mutant HIV, more particularly multiple mutant HIV, specifically multidrug-resistant human immunodeficiency viruses. The continuous fluorogenic assay of the present invention is distinctly advantageous in that it is more sensitive than standard assays in determining the activity of protease inhibitors against multidrug-resistant HIV. The continuous fluorogenic assay of the present invention is disclosed in more detail in the examples that follow. The inhibitory data obtained in accordance with this continuous fluorogenic assay can be used to determine vitality and fitness for HIV-1 protease in the presence of a protease inhibitor, in accordance with the present invention.


The present invention also provides a method of preventing the emergence of drug resistance in an HIV-infected mammal that includes the administration of a drug resistance-inhibiting effective amount of a compound represented by the formula:




embedded image


or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt, a prodrug, or an ester thereof, or a pharmaceutical composition thereof, wherein:


A is a group of the formula:




embedded image


R1 is H or an alkyl, an alkenyl, an alkynyl, a cycloalkyl, a cycloalkylalkyl, an aryl, an aralkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkylalkyl, a heteroaryl, or a heteroaralkyl radical, in which at least one hydrogen atom is optionally substituted with a substituent independently selected from the group consisting of OR7, SR7, CN, NO2, N3, and a halogen, wherein R7 is H, an alkyl, an alkenyl, or an alkynyl;


Y and Z are the same or different and are independently selected from the group consisting of CH, O, S, SO, SO2, NR8, R8C(O)N, R8C(S)N, R8OC(O)N, R8OC(S)N, R8SC(O)N, R8R9NC(O)N, and R8R9NC(S)N, wherein R8 and R9 are independently selected from the group consisting of H, an alkyl, an alkenyl, and an alkynyl;


n is an integer from 1 to 5;


X is a covalent bond, CHR10, CHR10CH2, CH2CHR10, O, NR10, or S, wherein R10 is H, an alkyl, an alkenyl, or an alkynyl;


Q is C(O), C(S), or SO2;


R2 is H, an alkyl, an alkenyl, or an alkynyl;


m is an integer from 0 to 6;


R3 is a cycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, an aryl, or a heteroaryl in which at least one hydrogen atom is optionally substituted with a substituent independently selected from the group consisting of H, alkyl, (CHOpR11, OR12, SR12, CN, N3, NO2, NR12R13, C(O)R12, C(S)R12, CO2R12, C(O)SR12, C(O)NR12R13, C(S)NR12R13, NR12C(O)R13, NR12C(S)R13, NR12CO2R13, NR12C(O)SR13, and a halogen, wherein:


p is an integer from 0 to 5;


R11 is a cycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, an aryl, or a heteroaryl in which at least one hydrogen atom is optionally substituted with a substituent independently selected from the group consisting of a halogen, OH, OCH3, NH2, NO2, SH, and CN; and


R12 and R13 are independently selected from the group consisting of H, an alkyl, an alkenyl, and an alkynyl;


R4 is OH, ═O (keto), or NH2, wherein, when R4 is OH, it is optionally in the form of a pharmaceutically acceptable ester or prodrug, and when R4 is NH2, it is optionally an amide, a hydroxylamino, a carbamate, a urea, an alkylamino, a dialkylamino, a protic salt, or a tetraalkylammonium salt;


R5 is H, a C1-C6 alkyl radical, a C2-C6 alkenyl radical, or (CH2)qR14, wherein q is an integer form 0 to 5, and R14 is a cycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, an aryl, or a heteroaryl radical in which at least one hydrogen atom is optionally substituted with a substituent independently selected from the group consisting of a halogen, OH, OCH3, NH2, NO2, SH, and CN;


W is C(O), C(S), S(O), or SO2; and


R6 is a cycloalkyl, heterocycloalkyl, aryl, or heteroaryl radical in which at least one hydrogen atom is optionally substituted with a substituent independently selected from the group consisting of a halogen, OR15, SR15, S(O)R15, SO2R15, SO2NR15R16, SO2N(OH)R15, CN, CR15═NR16, CR15═N(OR16), N3, NO2, NR15R16, N(OH)R15, C(O)R15, C(S)R15, CO2R15, C(O)SR15, C(O)NR15R16, C(S)NR15R16, C(O)N(OH)R15, C(S)N(OH)R15, NR15C(O)R16, NR15C(S)R16, N(OH)C(O)R15, N(OH)C(S)R15, NR15CO2R16, N(OH)CO2R15, NR15C(O)SR16, NR15C(O)NR16R17, NR15C(S)NR16R17, N(OH)C(O)NR15R16, N(OH)C(S)NR15R16, NR15C(O)N(OH)R16, NR15C(S)N(OH)R16, NR15SO2R16, NHSO2NR15R16, NR15SO2NHR16, P(O)(OR15)(OR16), an alkyl, an alkoxy, an alkylthio, an alkylamino, a cycloalkyl, a cycloalkylalkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkylalkyl, an aryl, an aryloxy, an arylamino, an arylthio, an aralkyl, an aryloxyalkyl, an arylaminoalkyl, an aralkoxy, an (aryloxy)alkoxy, an (arylamino)alkoxy, an (arylthio)alkoxy, an aralkylamino, an (aryloxy)alkylamino, an (arylamino)alkylamino, an (arylthio)alkylamino, an aralkylthio, an (aryloxy)alkylthio, an (arylamino)alkylthio, an (arylthio)alkylthio, a heteroaryl, a heteroaryloxy, a heteroarylamino, a heteroarylthio, a heteroaralkyl, a heteroaralkoxy, a heteroaralkylamino, and a heteroaralkylthio,


wherein R15, R16, and R17 are H, an unsubstituted alkyl, and an unsubstituted alkenyl,


wherein, when at least one hydrogen atom of R6 is optionally substituted with a substituent other than a halogen, OR15, SR15, S(O)R15, SO2R15, SO2NR15R16, SO2N(OH)R15, CN, CR15═NR16, CR15═N(OR16), N3, NO2, NR15R16, N(OH)R15, C(O)R15, C(S)R15, CO2R15, C(O)SR15, C(O)NR15R16, C(S)NR15R16, C(O)N(OH)R15, C(S)N(OH)R15, NR15C(O) R16, NR15C(S)R16, N(OH)C(O)R15, N(OH)C(S)R15, NR15CO2R16, N(OH)CO2R15, NR15C(O)SR16, NR15C(O)NR16R17, NR15C(S)NR16R17, N(OH)C(O)NR15R16, N(OH)C(S)NR15R16, NR15C(O)N(OH)R16, NR15C(S)N(OH)R16, NR15SO2R16, NHSO2NR15R16, NR15SO2NHR16, or P(O)(OR15)(OR16), then at least one hydrogen atom on said substituent is optionally substituted with a halogen, OR15, SR15, S(O)R15, SO2R15, SO2NR15R16, SO2N(OH)R15, CN, CR15═NR16, CR15═N(OR16), N3, NO2, NR15R16, N(OH)R15, C(O)R15, C(S)R15, CO2R15, C(O)SR15, C(O)NR15R16, C(S)NR15R16, C(O)N(OH)R15, C(S)N(OH)R15, NR15C(O)R16, NR15C(S)R16, N(OH)C(O)R15, N(OH)C(S)R15, NR15CO2R16, N(OH)CO2R15, NR15C(O)SR16, NR15C(O)NR16R17, NR15C(S)NR16R17, N(OH)C(O)NR15R15, N(OH)C(S)NR15R16, NR15C(O)N(OH)R16, NR15C(S)N(OH)R16, NR15SO2R16, NHSO2NR15R16, NR15SO2NHR16, or P(O)(OR15)(OR16).


Optionally, R5 and R6 are covalently bonded such that R5 and R6, together with the N—W bond of formula (I), comprise a 12 to 18 membered ring. The 12 to 18 membered ring can comprise at least one additional heteroatom in the ring skeleton other than the nitrogen of the N—W bond (e.g., N, O, or S) within the ring. In the practice of the method of preventing the emergence of drug resistance in an HIV-infected mammal, it is preferable that a mutant virus that is capable of evolving from the infection has low fitness, relative to the infecting virus, in the presence of the compound or combination of compounds that are administered.


As utilized herein, the term “alkyl” means a straight-chain or branched alkyl radical containing from about 1 to about 20 carbon atoms chain, preferably from about 1 to about 10 carbon atoms, more preferably from about 1 to about 8 carbon atoms, still more preferably from about 1 to about 6 carbon atoms. Examples of such substituents include methyl, ethyl, propyl, isopropyl, n-butyl, sec-butyl, isobutyl, tert-butyl, pentyl, isoamyl, hexyl, octyl, dodecanyl, and the like.


The term “alkenyl” means a straight-chain or branched-chain alkenyl radical having one or more double bonds and containing from about 2 to about 20 carbon atoms chain, preferably from about 2 to about 10 carbon atoms, more preferably from about 2 to about 8 carbon atoms, still more preferably from about 2 to about 6 carbon atoms. Examples of such substituents include vinyl, allyl, 1,4-butadienyl, isopropenyl, and the like.


The term “alkynyl” means a straight-chain or branched-chain alkynyl radical having one or more triple bonds and containing from about 2 to about 20 carbon atoms chain, preferably from about 2 to about 10 carbon atoms, more preferably from about 2 to about 8 carbon atoms, still more preferably from about 2 to about 6 carbon atoms. Examples of such radicals include ethynyl, propynyl(propargyl), butynyl, and the like.


The term “alkoxy” means an alkyl ether radical, wherein the term “alkyl” is defined as above. Examples of alkoxy radicals include methoxy, ethoxy, n-propoxy, isopropoxy, n-butoxy, isobutoxy, sec-butoxy, tert-butoxy, hexanoxy, and the like.


The term “alkylthio” means an alkyl thioether radical, wherein the term “alkyl” is defined as above. Examples of alkylthio radicals include methylthio (SCH3), ethylthio (SCH2CH3), n-propylthio, isopropylthio, n-butylthio, isobutylthio, sec-butylthio, tert-butylthio, n-hexylthio, and the like.


The term “alkylamino” means an alkyl amine radical, wherein the term “alkyl” is defined as above. Examples of alkylamino radicals include methylamino (NHCH3), ethylamino (NHCH2CH3), n-propylamino, isopropylamino, n-butylamino, isobutylamino, sec-butylamino, tert-butylamino, n-hexylamino, and the like.


The term “cycloalkyl” means a monocyclic or a polycyclic alkyl radical defined by one or more alkyl carbocyclic rings, which can be the same or different when the cycloalkyl is a polycyclic radical having 3 to about 10 carbon atoms in the carbocyclic skeleton in each ring, preferably about 4 to about 7 carbon atoms, more preferably 5 to 6 carbons atoms. Examples of monocyclic cycloalkyl radicals include cyclopropyl, cyclobutyl, cyclopentyl, cyclohexyl, cycloheptyl, cyclodecyl, and the like. Examples of polycyclic cycloalkyl radicals include decahydronaphthyl, bicyclo[5.4.0]undecyl, adamantyl, and the like.


The term “cycloalkylalkyl” means an alkyl radical as defined herein, in which at least one hydrogen atom on the alkyl radical is replaced by a cycloalkyl radical as defined herein. Examples of cycloalkylalkyl radicals include cyclohexylmethyl, 3-cyclopentylbutyl, and the like.


The term “heterocycloalkyl” means a cycloalkyl radical as defined herein (including polycyclics), wherein at least one carbon which defines the carbocyclic skeleton is substituted with a heteroatom such as, for example, O, N, or S, optionally comprising one or more double bond within the ring, provided the ring is not heteroaryl as defined herein. The heterocycloalkyl preferably has 3 to about 10 atoms (members) in the carbocyclic skeleton of each ring, preferably about 4 to about 7 atoms, more preferably 5 to 6 atoms. Examples of heterocycloalkyl radicals include epoxy, aziridyl, oxetanyl, tetrahydrofuranyl, dihydrofuranyl, piperadyl, piperidinyl, pyperazyl, piperazinyl, pyranyl, morpholinyl, and the like.


The term “heterocycloalkylalkyl” means an alkyl radical as defined herein, in which at least one hydrogen atom on the alkyl radical is replace by a heterocycloalkyl radical as defined herein. Examples of heterocycloalkylalkyl radicals include 2-morpholinomethyl, 3-(4-morpholino)-propyl, 4-(2-tetrahydrofuranyl)-butyl, and the like.


The term “aryl” refers to an aromatic carbocyclic radical, as commonly understood in the art, and includes monocyclic and polycyclic aromatics such as, for example, phenyl and naphthyl radicals, optionally substituted with one or more substituents selected from the group consisting of a halogen, an alkyl, alkoxy, amino, cyano, nitro, and the like.


The term “aryloxy” means aryl as defined herein, wherein a hydrogen atom is replaced by an oxygen. Examples of aryloxy radicals include phenoxy, naphthoxy, 4-fluorophenoxy, and the like.


The term “arylamino” means aryl as defined herein, wherein a hydrogen atom is replaced by an amine. Examples of arylamino radicals include phenylamino, naphthylamino, 3-nitrophenylamino, 4-aminophenylamino, and the like.


The term “arylthio” means aryl as defined herein, wherein a hydrogen atom is replaced by a sulfur atom. Examples of arylthio radicals include phenylthio, naphthylthio, 3-nitrophenylthio, 4-thiophenylthio, and the like.


The term “aralkyl” means alkyl as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by an aryl as defined herein. Examples of aralkyl radicals include benzyl, phenethyl, 3-(2-naphthyl)-butyl, and the like.


The term “aryloxyalkyl” means alkyl as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by an aryloxy as defined herein. Examples of aryloxyalkyl radicals include phenoxyethyl, 4-(3-aminophenoxy)-1-butyl, and the like.


The term “arylaminoalkyl” means alkyl as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by an arylamino as defined herein. Examples of arylaminoalkyl radicals include phenylaminoethyl, 4-(3-methoxyphenylamino)-1-butyl, and the like.


The term “aralkoxy” means alkoxy as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by an aryl as defined herein. Examples of aralkoxy radicals include 2-phenylethoxy, 2-phenyl-1-propoxy, and the like.


The term “(aryloxy)alkoxy” means alkoxy as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by an aryloxy as defined herein. Examples of (aryloxy)alkoxy radicals include 2-phenoxyethoxy, 4-(3-aminophenoxy)-1-butoxy, and the like.


The term “(arylamino)alkoxy” means alkoxy as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by an arylamino as defined herein. Examples of (arylamino)alkoxy radicals include 2-(phenylamino)-ethoxy, 2-(2-naphthylamino)-1-butoxy, and the like.


The term “(arylthio)alkoxy” means alkoxy as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by an arylthio as defined herein. Examples of (arylthio)alkoxy radicals include 2-(phenylthio)-ethoxy, and the like.


The term “aralkylamino” means alkylamino as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by an aryl as defined herein. Examples of aralkylamino radicals include 2-phenethylamino, 4-phenyl-n-butylamino, and the like.


The term “(aryloxy)alkylamino” means alkylamino as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by an aryloxy as defined herein. Examples of (aryloxy)alkylamino radicals include 3-phenoxy-n-propylamino, 4-phenoxybutylamino, and the like.


The term “(arylamino)alkylamino” means alkylamino as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by an arylamino as defined herein. Examples of (arylamino)alkylamino radicals include 3-(naphthylamino)-1-propylamino, 4-(phenylamino)-1-butylamino, and the like.


The term “(arylthio)alkylamino” means alkylamino as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by an arylthio as defined herein. Examples of (arylthio)alkylamino radicals include 2-(phenylthio)-ethylamino, and the like.


The term “aralkylthio” means alkylthio as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by an aryl as defined herein. Examples of aralkylthio radicals include 3-phenyl-2-propylthio, 2-(2-naphthyl)-ethylthio, and the like.


The term “(aryloxy)alkylthio” means alkylthio as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by an aryloxy as defined herein. Examples of (aryloxy)alkylthio radicals include 3-phenoxypropylthio, 4-(2-fluorophenoxy)-butylthio, and the like.


The term “(arylamino)alkylthio” means alkylthio as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by an arylamino as defined herein. Examples of (arylamino)alkylthio radicals include 2-(phenylamino)-ethylthio, 3-(2-naphthylamino)-n-propylthio, and the like.


The term “(arylthio)alkylthio” means alkylthio as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by an arylthio as defined herein. Examples of (arylthio)alkylthio radicals include 2-(naphthylthio)-ethylthio, 3-(phenylthio)-propylthio, and the like.


The term “heteroaryl” means a radical defined by an aromatic heterocyclic ring as commonly understood in the art, including monocyclic radicals such as, for example, imidazole, thiazole, pyrazole, pyrrole, furane, pyrazoline, thiophene, oxazole, isoxazol, pyridine, pyridone, pyrimidine, pyrazine, and triazine radicals, and also including polycyclics such as, for example, quinoline, isoquinoline, indole, and benzothiazole radicals, which heteroaryl radicals are optionally substituted with one or more substituents selected from the group consisting of a halogen, an alkyl, alkoxy, amino, cyano, nitro, and the like. It will be appreciated that the heterocycloalkyl and heteroaryl substituents can be coupled to the compounds of the present invention via a heteroatom, such as nitrogen (e.g., 1-imidazolyl).


The term “heteroaryloxy” means heteroaryl as defined herein, wherein a hydrogen atom on the heteroaryl ring is replaced by an oxygen. Heteroaryloxy radicals include, for example, 4-pyridyloxy, 5-quinolyloxy, and the like.


The term “heteroarylamino” means heteroaryl as defined herein, wherein a hydrogen atom on the heteroaryl ring is replaced by an nitrogen. Heteroarylamino radicals include, for example, 4-thiazolylamino, 2-pyridylamino, and the like.


The term “heteroarylthio” means heteroaryl as defined herein, wherein a hydrogen atom on the heteroaryl ring is replaced by a sulfur. Heteroarylthio radicals include, for example, 3-pyridylthio, 3-quinolylthio, 4-imidazolylthio, and the like.


The term “heteroaralkyl” means alkyl as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by a heteroaryl as defined herein. Examples of heteroaralkyl radicals include 2-pyridylmethyl, 3-(4-thiazolyl)-propyl, and the like.


The term “heteroaralkoxy” means alkoxy as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by a heteroaryl as defined herein. Examples of heteroaralkoxy radicals include 2-pyridylmethoxy, 4-(1-imidazolyl)-butoxy, and the like.


The term “heteroaralkylamino” means alkylamino as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by a heteroaryl as defined herein. Examples of heteroaralkylamino radicals include 4-pyridylmethylamino, 3-(2-furanyl)-propylamino, and the like.


The term “heteroaralkylthio” means alkylthio as defined herein, wherein an alkyl hydrogen atom is replaced by a heteroaryl as defined herein. Examples of heteroaralkylthio radicals include 3-pyridylmethylthio, 3-(4-thiazolyl)-propylthio, and the like.


In the compound of Formula I, A is preferably a group of the formula:




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R1 is H or an alkyl, an alkenyl, a cycloalkyl, a cycloalkylalkyl, an aryl, an aralkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkylalkyl, a heteroaryl, or a heteroaralkyl radical, in which at least one hydrogen atom is optionally substituted with a substituent independently selected from the group consisting of OR7, SR7, CN, NO2, N3, and a halogen, wherein R7 is H, an unsubstituted alkyl, or an unsubstituted alkenyl; Y and Z are the same or different and are independently selected from the group consisting of CH2, O, S, SO, SO2, NR8, R8C(O)N, R8C(S)N, R8OC(O)N, R8OC(S)N, R8SC(O)N, R8R9NC(O)N, and R8R9NC(S)N, wherein R8 and R9 are independently selected from the group consisting of H, an unsubstituted alkyl, and an unsubstituted alkenyl; X is a covalent bond, CHR10, CHR10CH2, CH2CHR10, O, NR10, or S, wherein R10 is H, an unsubstituted alkyl, or an unsubstituted alkenyl; R2 is H, a C1-C6alkyl radical, or a C2-C6 alkenyl radical; R12 and R13, as defined with respect to R3, are independently selected from the group consisting of H, an unsubstituted alkyl, and an unsubstituted alkenyl radical; R4 is OH, NH2, or NHCH3; W is C(O), C(S), or SO2; and R6 is a cycloalkyl, heterocycloalkyl, aryl, or heteroaryl radical in which at least one hydrogen atom is optionally substituted with a substituent independently selected from the group consisting of a halogen, OR15, SR15, CN, N3, NO2, NR15R16, C(O)R15, C(S)R15, CO2R15, C(O)SR15, C(O)NR15R16, C(S)NR15R16, NR15C(O)R16, NR15C(S)R16, NR15CO2R16, NR15C(O)SR16, NR15C(O)NR16R17, and NR15C(S)NR16R17, an alkyl, an alkoxy, an alkylthio, an alkylamino, a cycloalkyl, a cycloalkylalkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkylalkyl, an aryl, an aryloxy, an arylamino, an arylthio, an aralkyl, an aryloxyalkyl, an arylaminoalkyl, an aralkoxy, an (aryloxy)alkoxy, an (arylamino)alkoxy, an (arylthio)alkoxy, an aralkylamino, an (aryloxy)alkylamino, an (arylamino)alkylamino, an (arylthio)alkylamino, an aralkylthio, an (aryloxy)alkylthio, an (arylamino)alkylthio, an (arylthio)alkylthio, a heteroaryl, a heteroaryloxy, a heteroarylamino, a heteroarylthio, a heteroaralkyl, a heteroaralkoxy, a heteroaralkylamino, and a heteroaralkylthio, wherein R15, R16, and R17 are H, an unsubstituted alkyl, and an unsubstituted alkenyl, such that when at least one hydrogen atom of R6 is optionally substituted with a substituent other than a halogen, OR15, SR15, CN, N3, NO2, NR15R16, C(O)R15, C(S)R15, CO2R15, C(O)SR15, C(O)NR15R16, C(S)NR15R16, NR15C(O)R16, NR15C(S)R16, NR15CO2R16, NR15C(O)SR16, NR15C(O)NR16R17, or NR15C(S)NR16R17, at least one hydrogen atom on said substituent attached to R6 is optionally substituted with a halogen, OR′5, SR15, CN, N3, NO2, NR15R16, C(O)R15, C(S)R15, CO2R15, C(O)SR15, C(O)NR15R16, C(S)NR15R16, NR15C(O)R15, NR15C(S)NR15CO2R16, NR15C(O)SR16, NR15C(O)NR16R17, or NR15C(S)NR16R17.


It is further preferred that when R1 is an alkyl or an alkenyl radical (i.e., an alkyl or an alkenyl substituent), then it is a C1-C6 alkyl or, in the case when R1 is an alkenyl, it is a C2-C6 alkenyl. When R1 is a monocyclic substituent such as, for example, a cycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, an aryl, or a heteroaryl, it preferably comprises 4-7 members in the ring that defines the monocyclic skeleton. When R7, R8 or R9 is an unsubstituted alkyl, it is preferably a C1-C6 unsubstituted alkyl; and when R7, R8 or R9 is an unsubstituted alkenyl, it is preferably a C1-C6 unsubstituted alkenyl. The ring defined by R3 preferably comprises 4-7 members or, in the case of polycyclics, each ring comprises 4-7 members. When R3 is (CH2)pR11, the ring defined by R11 preferably comprises 4-7 members, or, in the case of polycyclics, each ring comprises 4-7 members. When either of R12 or R13 is an unsubstituted alkyl, it is preferably a C1-C6 unsubstituted alkyl, and when either of R12 or R13 is an unsubstituted alkenyl, it is a C2-C6 unsubstituted alkyl. When R14 is a cycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, an aryl, or a heteroaryl, the ring defined by R14 preferably comprises 4-7 members, or, in the case of polycyclics, each ring comprises 4-7 members. When R6 is a cycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, aryl, or a heteroaryl, the ring defined by R6 preferably comprises 4-7 members, or, in the case of polycyclics, each ring comprises 4-7 members, and when R6 is substituted with a substituent that is an alkyl, an alkylthio, or an alkylamino, it is preferred that the substituent comprises from one to six carbon atoms, and when R6 is substituted with a substituent that is a cycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, an aryl, or a heteroaryl, the ring defined by the substituent preferably comprises 4-7 members or, in the case of polycyclics, each ring comprises 4-7 members.


In a preferred embodiment, the method of preventing the emergence of resistance in accordance with the present invention includes administering a compound of Formula (I), wherein Q is C(O), R2 is H, and W is C(O) or SO2. In a further preferred embodiment, Q is C(O), R2 is H, R4 is OH, W is SO2, and the stereochemical orientation of the asymmetric centers is represented by formula (IA) or (IB) below:




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It is further preferred that R6 is a monocyclic substituent, preferably an aromatic ring, which is preferably a substituted benzene ring, as illustrated by the formula:




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wherein Ar is a phenyl which is optionally substituted with a substituent selected from the group consisting of methyl, amino, hydroxy, methoxy, methylthio, hydroxymethyl, aminomethyl, and methoxymethyl.


In a preferred series, Y and Z are oxygen atoms, n is 2, the resulting bis-tetrahydrofuranyl ring system has the stereochemical orientations illustrated in Formulae (IC) and (ID) above, m is 1, and R3 is phenyl, in which case the compound is represented by the formula:




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wherein Ar is a phenyl which is optionally substituted with a substituent selected from the group consisting of methyl, amino, hydroxy, methoxy, methylthio, hydroxymethyl, aminomethyl, and methoxymethyl. When the compound is a compound of Formula (IE) or (IF), wherein at least one hydrogen atom on Ar substituted with a substituent selected from the group consisting of methyl, amino, hydroxy, methoxy, methylthio, hydroxymethyl, and methoxymethyl, it is further preferred that X is an oxygen. Still more preferably, X is an oxygen and R5 is isobutyl. Suitable Ar substituents include phenyl groups that are substituted at the para position, the meta position, and/or the ortho position. Examples of suitable Ar substituents are shown in Table 4, and in FIGS. 3 and 5A-5D.


A resistance-inhibiting effective amount is an amount sufficient to produce an in vivo drug concentration or level in which the biochemical vitality of a mutant HIV is lower than the biochemical vitality of the HIV (predecessor) infecting the HIV-infected mammal. For example, a resistance-inhibiting effective amount is an amount sufficient to produce an in vivo drug concentration or level where the value for biochemical fitness is less than one, when determined by the ratio of the biochemical vitality of the mutant to the biochemical vitality of the predecessor. The compound can be administered to a wild-type HIV-infected mammal to prevent the emergence of first line resistance, or it can be administered to a mammal infected with a mutant-HIV to prevent the emergence of drug resistance due to further mutations.


The compound is preferably administered in the form of a pharmaceutical composition. The pharmaceutical composition preferably includes a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier and a resistance-inhibiting effective amount of at least one of the aforesaid compound, alone or in combination with another antiretroviral compound such as, for example, a wild-type HIV protease inhibitor, a mutant HIV retroviral protease inhibitor, or a reverse transcriptase inhibitor. Generally, the pharmaceutical composition of the present invention comprises a resistance-inhibiting effective amount of at least one compound of Formula (I), as disclosed herein, and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.


In a preferred embodiment, a pharmaceutical composition is administered that comprises a resistance-inhibiting effective amount of at least one compound of Formula (IA) or Formula (IB), or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt, prodrug, or ester thereof, and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier. In a further preferred embodiment, the pharmaceutical composition comprises a resistance-inhibiting effective amount of at least one compound of Formula (IC) or Formula (ID), or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt, prodrug, or ester thereof, and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier. In a highly preferred embodiment, the pharmaceutical composition comprises a resistance-inhibiting effective amount of at least one compound of Formula (IE), and pharmaceutically acceptable salts, prodrugs, and esters thereof, and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.


Pharmaceutically acceptable carriers are well-known to those of skill in the art. The choice of a carrier will be determined in part by the particular composition, as well as by the particular mode of administration. Accordingly, there are a wide variety of suitable formulations for administration in accordance the present invention.


The pharmaceutical composition may be administered in a form suitable for oral use such as, for example, tablets, troches, lozenges, aqueous or oily suspensions or solutions, dispersible powders or granules, emulsions, hard or soft capsules, syrups or elixirs. Compositions intended for oral use may be prepared according to any method known in the art form the manufacture of pharmaceutical compositions, and such compositions can contain one or more agents such as, for example, sweetening agents, flavoring agents, coloring agents, and preserving agents in order to provide a pharmaceutically elegant and/or palatable preparation. Tablets can contain the active ingredient in admixture with non-toxic pharmaceutically acceptable excipients which are suitable for manufacture of tablets. Such excipients can be, for example, inert diluents such as, for example, calcium carbonate, lactose, calcium phosphate or sodium phosphate; granulating and disintegrating agents such as, for example, maize starch or alginic acid; binding agents such as, for example, starch, gelatine or acacia, and lubricating agents such as, for example, stearic acid or talc. The tablets may be uncoated or they may be coated by known techniques to delay disintegration and absorption in the gastrointestinal tract and thereby provide a sustained action over a longer period. For example, a time delay material such as glyceryl monostearate or glyceryl distearate alone or with a wax may be employed.


Formulations for oral use also can be presented as hard gelatin capsules wherein the active ingredient is mixed with an inert solid diluent, for example calcium carbonate, calcium phosphate or kaolin, or as soft gelatin capsules wherein the active ingredient is mixed with water or an oil medium, for example arachis oil, peanut oil, liquid paraffin or olive oil.


Aqueous suspensions typically contain the active materials in admixture with excipients suitable for the manufacture of aqueous suspensions. Such excipients are suspending agents, for example, sodium carboxymethyl cellulose, methylcellulose, hydroxypropylmethylcellulose, sodium alginate, polyvinylpyrrolidone, gum tragacanth and gam acacia; dispersing or wetting agents may be a natural-occurring phosphatide, for example, lecithin, or condensation products of an alkylene oxide with fatty acids, for example polyoxyethylene stearate, or condensation products of ethylene oxide with long chain aliphatic alcohols, for example heptadecaethyleneoxycetanol, or condensation products of ethylene oxide with partial esters derived from fatty acids and a hexitol such as polyoxyethylene sorbitol monooleate, or condensation products of ethylene oxide with partial esters derived from fatty acids and hexitol anhydrides, for example polyoxyethylene sorbitan mono-oleate. The aqueous suspensions also can contain one or more preservatives, for example, ethyl or n-propyl p-hydroxy benzoate, one or more coloring agents, one or more flavoring agents and one or more sweetening agents such as, for example, sucrose or saccharin.


Oily suspensions may be formulated by suspending the active ingredient in a vegetable oil, for example arachis oil, olive oil, sesame oil or coconut oil, or in a mineral oil such as liquid paraffin. The oil suspensions may contain a thickening agent, for example beeswax, hard paraffin or cetyl alcohol. Sweetening agents, such as those set forth above, and flavoring agents may be added to provide a palatable oral preparation. These compositions can be preserved by the addition of an antioxidant such as, for example, ascorbic acid.


Dispersible powders and granules suitable for preparation of an aqueous suspension by the addition of water provide the active ingredient in admixture with a dispersing or wetting agent, suspending agent and one or more preservatives. Suitable dispersing or wetting agents and suspending agents are exemplified by those already mentioned above. Additional excipients, for example sweetening, flavoring and coloring agents, also may be present.


The pharmaceutical composition also can be administered in the form of oil-in-water emulsions. The oily phase can be a vegetable oil, for example, olive oil or arachis oils, or a mineral oil, for example liquid paraffin or mixtures of these. Suitable emulsifying agents may be naturally-occurring gums, for example gum acacia or gum tragacantn, naturally-occurring phosphatides, for example soya bean lecithin, and esters or partial esters derived from fatty acids and hexitol anhydrides, for example sorbitan mono-oleate, and condensation products of the said partial esters and ethylene oxide, for example polyoxyethylene sorbitan mono-oleate. The emulsions also can contain sweetening and flavoring agents.


The pharmaceutical composition also can be administered in the form of syrups and elixirs, which are typically formulated with sweetening agents such as, for example, glycerol, sorbitol or sucrose. Such formulations also can contain a demulcent, a preservative and flavoring and coloring agents.


Further, the pharmaceutical composition can be administered in the form of a sterile injectable preparation, for example, as a sterile injectable aqueous or oleagenous suspension. Suitable suspensions for parenteral administration can be formulated according to the known art using those suitable dispersing or wetting agents and suspending agents which have been mentioned above. Formulations suitable for parenteral administration include, for example, aqueous and non-aqueous, isotonic sterile injection solutions, which can contain anti-oxidants, buffers, bacteriostates, and solutes that render the formulation isotonic with the blood of the intended recipient, and aqueous and non-aqueous sterile suspensions that can include suspending agents, solubilizers, thickening agents, stabilizers, and preservatives. The sterile injectable preparation can be a solution or a suspension in a non-toxic parenterally-acceptable diluent or solvent, for example, as a solution in water or 1,3-butanediol. Among the acceptable vehicles and solvents that can be employed, for example, are water, Ringer's solution and isotonic sodium chloride solution. In addition, sterile, fixed oils are conventionally employed as a solvent or suspending medium. For this purpose any bland fixed oil can be employed including synthetic mono- or diglycerides. In addition, fatty acids such as, for example, oleic acid find use in the preparation of injectables.


Further, the compound can be administered in the form of suppositories for rectal administration of the drug. These compositions can be prepared by mixing the drug with a suitable non-irritating excipient which is solid at ordinary temperatures but liquid at the rectal temperature and will therefore melt in the rectum to release the drug. Such materials include, for example, cocoa butter and polyethylene glycols. Formulations suitable for vaginal administration can be presented as pessaries, tampons, creams, gels, pastes, and foams.


Formulations suitable for topical administration may be presented as creams, gels, pastes, or foams, containing, in addition to the active ingredient, such carriers as are known in the art to be appropriate.


The composition can be made into an aerosol formulation to be administered via inhalation. Such aerosol formulations can be placed into pressurized acceptable propellants, such as dichlorodifluoromethane, propane, nitrogen, and the like. They also can be formulated as pharmaceuticals for non-pressured preparations such as in a nebulizer or an atomizer.


The formulations can be presented in unit-dose or multi-dose sealed containers, such as ampules and vials, and can be stored in a freeze-dried (lyophilized) condition requiring only the addition of the sterile liquid excipient, for example, water, for injections, immediately prior to use. Extemporaneous injection solutions and suspensions can be prepared from sterile powders, granules, and tablets of the kind previously described.


Any suitable dosage level can be employed in the pharmaceutical compositions of the present invention. The dose administered to an animal, particularly a human, in the context of the present invention should be sufficient to effect a prophylactic or therapeutic response in the animal over a reasonable timeframe. The amount of active ingredient that can be combined with the carrier materials to produce a single dosage form will vary depending upon the host treated and the particular mode of administration. The size of the dose also will be determined by the existence, nature, and extent of any adverse side-effects that might accompany the administration of a particular composition. Suitable doses and dosage regimens for the prevention of drug resistance can be determined by comparisons to antiretroviral chemotherapeutic agents that are known to inhibit the proliferation of a retrovirus in an infected individual. The preferred dosage is the amount that results in the inhibition of the emergence of mutant drug-resistant retroviruses, particularly the emergence of multidrug-resistant retroviral HIV, without significant side effects. In proper doses and with suitable administration of certain compounds, a wide range of antiretroviral chemotherapeutic compositions are possible. A suitable dose includes a dose or dosage which would be insufficient to completely suppress the growth of a wild-type or predecessor virus, but would be sufficient to inhibit or effectively suppress the growth of a mutant.


In accordance with the present invention, the compound or composition can be administered in combination with other antiretroviral compounds such as, for example, ritonavir, amprenavir, saquinavir, indinavir, AZT, ddI, ddC, D4T, lamivudine, 3TC, and the like, as well as admixtures and combinations thereof, in a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier. The individual daily dosages for these combinations can range from about one-fifth of the minimally recommended clinical dosages to the maximum recommended levels for the entities when they are given singly.


The present invention also provides a method of preventing the emergence of multidrug-resistant retroviruses in an HIV-infected mammal, which method comprises administering to the mammal a multidrug resistance-inhibiting effective amount of a compound of the present invention, so as to inhibit the emergence of a multidrug-resistant retrovirus in the mammal. The dose administered to an animal, particularly a human in the context of the present invention, should be sufficient to effect a therapeutic response in the animal over a reasonable time frame. The dose will be determined by the strength of the particular composition employed and the condition of the animal, as well as the body weight of the animal to be treated. The size of the dose will also be determined by the existence, nature, and extent of any adverse side-effects that might accompany the administration of a particular compound. Other factors which effect the specific dosage include, for example, bioavailability, metabolic profile, and the pharmacodynamics associated with the particular compound to be administered in a particular patient. One skilled in the art will recognize that the specific dosage level for any particular patient will depend upon a variety of factors including, for example, the activity of the specific compound employed, the age, body weight, general health, sex, diet, time of administration, route of administration, rate of excretion, drug combination, CD4 count, the potency of the active compound with respect to the particular mutant retroviral strain to be inhibited, and the severity of the symptoms presented prior to or during the course of therapy. What constitutes a resistance-inhibiting effective amount can be determined, in part, by use of one or more of the assays described herein, particularly the fitness assay of the present invention.


One skilled in the art will appreciate that suitable methods of administering compounds and pharmaceutical compositions are available, and, although more than one route can be used to administer a particular composition, a particular route can provide a more immediate and/or more effective reaction than another route.


Numerous compounds have been identified that exhibit potent antiretroviral activity, in particular retroviral protease activity, against wild-type HIV. However, among the fifteen currently FDA-approved antiretroviral agents which are all known potent inhibitors of wild-type HIV, five of which are potent inhibitors of wild-type HIV protease, none of these compounds have the ability to prevent the emergence of drug-resistance mutations that are associated with high level cross resistance. Thus, these inhibitors do not have the ability to suppress the sufficiently fit mutant retroviruses that can (and almost certainly will) emerge under the selection pressure of these inhibitors.


Surprisingly, it has been discovered that compound 32 (shown in FIG. 3A), which is a potent wild-type HIV inhibitor, possesses remarkably potent and unprecedented broad-spectrum inhibitory activity against a panel of recombinant mutant HIV protease targets. These enzymes represent the key or primary resistance mutations, most of which occur in the active site region. Based on this finding, the compound was tested against a panel of drug resistant mutant patient isolates of HIV and was found to possess broad spectrum antiviral activity against a wide range of clinically isolated, multiply drug-resistant, human immunodeficiency viruses. Other compounds described herein showed similar activity. The mutant viruses were obtained from infected humans who had received several antiviral drugs. Although applicants do not wish to abound by any one particular theory, it is believed that the combination of the bicyclic ligand (vii) with isostere (vi) gives the antiretroviral compounds of the present invention the unique ability to bind to the active site of the mutant proteases of multiply drug-resistant human immunodeficiency viruses generally, which trait has heretofore not been reported with respect to any known chemotherapeutic and/or experimental HIV protease inhibitor. A wild-type preliminary screen was utilized to determine the antiretroviral activity of analogs against wild-type HIV. It is predicted that compounds of Formula (I), which have potent antiretroviral or protease-inhibitory activity against wild-type HIV, also will be potent inhibitors of drug-resistance, even multiple drug-resistance, in wild-type HIV, or even a mutant thereof.


The resistance-inhibiting compounds of the present invention can be synthesized by any suitable method known in the art. The preferred synthesis method is generally illustrated in FIG. 4, which is an representation of the synthetic approach to preparing a preferred series of compounds, wherein a compound of Formula (I) is synthesized in several steps starting from azidoepoxide (i), wherein R1-R17, m, n, p, Q, W, X, y, and z are defined as above. Referring to FIG. 4, amine (ii) is nucleophilically added to azidoepoxide (i), providing aminoalcohol (iii). The amine functional group of aminoalcohol (iii) is then reacted with intermediate (iv), wherein L represents a leaving group (e.g., halogen, N-oxysuccinimide), which can be displaced by the amine of aminoalcohol (iii), to provide azide (v). Reduction of azide (v), or, when R5 is not hydrogen, reductive amination with aldehyde R5CH═O, provides intermediate (vi), which is subsequently coupled with activated bicyclic ligand (vii), to provide compounds of Formula I. Of course, it will be appreciated by a person of ordinary skill in the art that there are combinations of substituents, functional groups, R-groups, and the like, which are reactive under particular reaction conditions, and require the utilization of an appropriate protecting group or groups, which are known in the art, to ensure that the desired synthetic transformation will take place without the occurrence of undesired side reactions. For example, possible substituents at R5 (e.g., NH2) can be competitive nucleophiles requiring the attachment of an appropriate protecting group thereon (e.g., benzyloxycarbonyl, tert-butoxycarbonyl) in order obtain proper selectivity in the ring opening of epoxide (i) with amine (ii).



FIGS. 1-3B illustrate the synthesis of a preferred series of compounds for use in the method of preventing the emergence of resistance in accordance with the present invention. FIG. 1, which is a synthetic scheme for the synthesis of a particular sulfonamide, illustrates the synthesis of a preferred isosteric core, particularly, the sulfonamide isosteric core represented by aminosulfonamide 15. With reference to FIG. 1, aminosulfonamide core 15 can be synthesized by initially providing azidoepoxide 11 and subjecting it to nucleophilic addition with amine 12 to give aminoalcohol 13, which is subsequently converted to sulfonamide 14 by reaction with 4-methoxybenzenesulfonyl chloride. The azide group of 14 is then reduced to provide aminosulfonamide 15, which can be used as a core for synthesizing numerous multidrug-resistant retroviral protease inhibitors of the present invention.



FIG. 2, which is a reaction scheme detailing the preparation of bicyclic alcohols, illustrates the synthesis of a preferred series of bicyclic ligands, particularly bis-tetrahydrofurans 25 and 26. With reference to FIG. 2, dihydrofuran 21 is treated with N-iodosuccinimide in the presence of propargyl alcohol to give iodoether 22, which is cyclized to methylene-substituted bis-tetrahydrofuran 23. Ozonolysis of the exo-methylene residue of 23, followed by reduction, provides bicyclic racemic alcohol 24, which is resolved to give, separately, bicyclic alcohol 25 and its enantiomeric acetate ester 26, which ester group of 26 is subsequently hydrolyzed to afford enantiomer 27.



FIGS. 3A and 3B, which are reaction schemes describing the preparation of two protease inhibitors, illustrate the preparation of two preferred multidrug-resistant HIV protease inhibitors of the present invention. With reference to FIG. 3A, compound 32 was synthesized by coupling succinimidocarbonate 31 with aminosulfonamide 15. Succinimidocarbonate 31 was prepared by reacting optically pure bicyclic alcohol 25 with disuccinimidyl carbonate in the presence of triethylamine. Inhibitor 34, which possesses the enantiomeric bis-tetrahydrofuranyl ligand (relative to inhibitor 32), was prepared in the same fashion, except that the enantiomeric bicyclic alcohol 27 was used instead of alcohol 25, as illustrated in FIG. 3B.


The following examples further illustrate the present invention but, of course, should not be construed as in any way limiting its scope.


Example 1

This example describes the synthesis of exemplary epoxide 11 (FIG. 1), which is used as an intermediate in the synthesis of a particular series of compounds within the scope of the present invention.


Anhydrous CuCN (4.86 g, 54 mmol) was added to a solution of butadiene monooxide (38 g, 540 mmol) in anhydrous tetrahydrofuran (1.2 L) and the resulting mixture was stirred at −78° C. Commercial phenyl magnesium bromide solution (Aldrich) in ether (65 mmol) was added dropwise over a period of 10 min. The resulting reaction mixture was then allowed to warm to 0° C. and it was continued to stir until the reaction mixture was homogeneous. After this period, the reaction mixture was cooled to −78° C. and 0.58 mole of phenylmagnesium bromide solution in ether was added dropwise for 30 min. The reaction mixture was allowed to warm to 23° C. for 1 h. The reaction was quenched by slow addition of saturated aqueous NH4Cl (120 mL) followed by NH2OH (70 mL), saturated NH4Cl (500 ML) and then H2O (300 mL). The aqueous layer was thoroughly extracted with ethyl acetate (2×300 mL). The combined organic layers were dried over anhydrous Na2SO4, filtered, and concentrated under reduced pressure. The residue was distilled under vacuum (0.12 torr) at 95° C. to give trans-4-phenyl-2-butene-1-ol (75.6 g).


To a suspension of powdered 4 Å molecular sieves (6.6 g) in anhydrous methylene chloride (750 mL), titanium tetraisopropoxide (Aldrich, 3.2 mL) and then diethyl D-tartrate (2.3 mL) were added. The resulting mixture was cooled to −22° C. and tert-butylhydroperoxide solution in isooctane (Aldrich, 430 mmol) was added over a period of 10 min. The mixture was stirred an additional 30 min and then a solution of trans-4-phenyl-2-butene-1-ol (32.6 g, 213 mmol), in anhydrous methylene chloride (120 mL), was added dropwise over a period of 40 min at −22° C. The reaction mixture was then aged in a freezer at −22° C. for 24 h. After this period, water (100 mL) was added to the reaction mixture at −22° C. and the mixture was allowed to warm to 0° C. After stirring at 0° C. for 45 min, 20% NaOH in brine (20 mL) was added. The resulting mixture was then allowed to warm to 23° C. and was stirred at that temperature for 1 h. After this period, the layers were separated and the aqueous layer was extracted with methylene chloride (2×200 mL). The combined organic layers were dried over anhydrous Na2SO4 and concentrated under reduced pressure. The residue was diluted with toluene (800 mL) and then evaporated under reduced pressure. The residue was chromatographed over silica gel (35% ethyl acetate in hexane as eluent) to provide (2R,3R)-epoxy-4-phenylbutan-1-ol (21.8 g).


To a solution of titanium ispropoxide (12 mL) in anhydrous benzene (250 mL) was added azidotrimethylsilane (11 mL) and the resulting mixture was refluxed for 6 h. A solution of (2R,3R)-epoxy-4-phenylbutan-1-ol (5.32 g) in anhydrous benzene (25 mL) was added to the above refluxing mixture. The resulting mixture was refluxed for addition 25 min. After this period, the reaction mixture was cooled to 23° C. and the reaction was quenched with aqueous 5% H2SO4 (400 mL). The resulting mixture was stirred for 1 h and the layers were separated and the aqueous layer was extracted with ethyl acetate (2×300 mL). The combined organic layers were washed with saturated NaHCO3 (200 mL), dried over Na2SO4 and concentrated under reduced pressure to afford the (2S,3S)-2-hydroxy-3-azido-4-phenyl-butan-12-ol (5.1 g) as a white solid (mp 81-82° C.).


To a stirred solution of the azidodiol (5.1 g) in chloroform (100 mL) at 23° C., 2-acetoxyisobutyryl chloride (Aldrich, 5 mL) was added. The resulting reaction mixture was stirred at 23° C. for 8 h. The reaction was quenched by addition of saturated sodium bicarbonate (100 mL) and the resulting mixture was stirred 30 min. The layers were separated and the aqueous layer was extracted with chloroform (2×200 mL). The combined organic layer was extracted with chloroform (2×200 mL). The combined organic layers were dried over Na2SO4 and evaporated under reduced pressure. The resulting residue was dissolved in anhydrous THF (50 mL) and solid NaOMe (2.1 g) was added. The mixture was stirred for 4 h at 23° C. and after this period, the reaction was quenched with saturated NH4Cl (50 mL). The resulting mixture was extracted with ethyl acetate (2×200 ML). The combined organic layers were dried over anhydrous Na2SO4 and concentrated under reduced pressure to give a residue, which was chromatographed over silica gel (10% ethyl acetate in hexanes) to afford the 3(S)-azido-(1,2R)-epoxy-4-phenylbutane 11 (3.3 g) as an oil: 1H NMR (300 MHz): CDCl3; δ 7.4-7.2 (m, 5H,), 3.6 (m, 1H), 3.1 (m, 1H), 2.95 (dd, 1H, J=4.6, 13.9 Hz), 2.8 (m, 3H).


Example 2

This example illustrates the synthesis of azidoalcohol 13 (FIG. 1), which can be used as an intermediate in the synthesis of a preferred series of the compounds of the present invention.


To a stirred solution of above azidoepoxide 11 (700 mg, 3.7 mmol) in ispropanol (70 mL) was added isobutyl amine (Aldrich, 0.74 mL 7.4 mmol) and the resulting mixture was heated at 80° C. for 12 h. After this period, the reaction mixture was concentrated under reduced pressure and the residue was chromatographed over silica gel to provide azidoalcohol 13 (800 mg) as an oil.


Example 3

This example illustrates the synthesis of azidosulfonamide 14, the structure of which is shown in FIG. 1.


To a stirred solution of 13 (600 mg, 2.28 mmol) in CH2Cl2 (20 mL) was added 4-methoxybenzenesulfonyl chloride (Aldrich, 530 mg, 2.52 mmol) and saturated aqueous NaHCO3 (6 mL). The resulting heterogeneous mixture was stirred at 23° C. for 12 h. The reaction was diluted with CH2Cl2 and the layers were separated. The organic layer was washed with brine, dried over anhydrous magnesium sulfate and concentrated to dryness. The residue was chromatographed over silica gel (25% ethyl acetate/hexane) to provide 900 mg of azidosulfonamide 14.


Example 4

This example illustrates the preparation of aminosulfonamide 15 via reduction of azidosulfonamide 14, as shown in FIG. 1.


A solution of 14 (1.53 g) in THF (45 mL), NeOH (10 mL) and acetic acid (0.5 mL), was shaken with 10% palladium on carbon catalyst (200 mg) at 50 psi hydrogen pressure for 2 h. Removal of the catalyst by filtration over celite and concentration under reduced pressure gave a crude residue, which was diluted with CH2Cl2 (100 mL), and was washed successively with saturated aqueous NaHCO3 and brine. The organic layer was dried over MgSO4 and concentrated to give the corresponding aminosulfonamide 15 (1.2 g).


Example 5

This example demonstrates the synthesis of trans-2-(propargyloxy)-3-iodotetrahydrofuran 22 (FIG. 2).


To a stirred, ice-cold suspension of 15 g (66.6 mmol) of N-iodosuccinimide in 150 mL of CH2Cl2 was added a mixture of dihydrofuran 21 (66.6 mmol, 4.67 g, 5.1 mL) and propargyl alcohol (100 mmol, 5.0 g, 5.2 mL) of in 50 mL of CH2Cl2 over 20 min. After warming to 24° C. with stirring over 2 h, 200 mL of water were added and the stirring continued for 1 h. The layers were separated and the aqueous layer was extracted with 2×100 mL of CH2Cl2. The combined organic extracts were washed with brine solution containing small amount of Na2S2O3 (70 mg), dried over anhydrous Na2SO4, filtered, and concentrated. Chromatography over silica gel using 30% ethyl acetate in hexane afforded (15.4 g, 92%) the title iodoether 22 as an oil.


Example 6

This example illustrates the synthesis of (±)-(3aR, 6aS) and (3aS,6aR)-3-methylene-4H-hexahydrofuro-[2,3-b]furan 23, as shown in FIG. 2.


To a refluxing solution of (20.7 mL, 77 mmol) tributyltin hydride containing AIBN (100 mg) in toluene (200 mL) was added dropwise a solution of 15.4 g (61 mmol) of iodotetrahydrofuran 22 in toluene (50 mL) over a period of 1 h. The resulting mixture was stirred at reflux for an additional 4 h (monitored by TLC). The mixture was then cooled to 23° C. and concentrated under reduced pressure. The residue was partitioned between petroleum ether and acetonitrile (200 mL of each) and the acetonitrile (lower) layer was concentrated. The residue was purified by chromatography on silica gel, using 100 ethyl acetate in hexane as the eluent to provide the title product 23 (5.84 g, 760) as an oil.


Example 7

This example demonstrates the synthesis of (±)-(3SR, 3aRS, 6aS) and (3R,3aS,6aR)-3-hydroxy-4H-hexahydrofuro[2,3-b]furan 24, as shown in FIG. 2.


A stream of ozone was dispersed into a solution of 15 (5.84 g, 46.4 mmol) at −78° C. in 150 mL of methanol and 150 mL of CH2Cl2 for 30 min. The resulting blue solution was purged with nitrogen until colorless, then quenched with 20 mL of dimethyl sulfide and the resulting mixture was allowed to warm to 23° C. The mixture was concentrated under reduced pressure to afford the crude ketone. The resulting crude ketone was dissolved in ethanol (50 mL) and the solution was cooled to 0° C. and sodium borohydride (2.1 g, 55.6 mmol) was added. The reaction mixture was stirred for an additional 2 h at 0° C. and then quenched with 10% aqueous citric acid (10 mL). The resulting mixture was concentrated under reduced pressure and the reside was partitioned between ethyl acetate and brine. The layers were separated and the aqueous layer was extracted with ethyl acetate (2×100 mL). The combined organic layers were dried over anhydrous-Na2SO4 and concentrated carefully under reduced pressure. The resulting residue was chromatographed over silica gel using 30% ethyl acetate in hexane as the eluent to furnish (4.52 g, 75%) the title racemic alcohol 24 as an oil.


Example 8

This example illustrates the preparation of immobilized Amano Lipase 30, which was used to resolve racemic aminoalcohol 24 (FIG. 2).


Commercially available 4 g of Celite® 521 (Aldrich) was loaded on a buchner funnel and washed successively with 50 mL of deionized water and 50 mL of 0.05; N phosphate buffer (pH=7.0; Fisher Scientific). The washed celite was then added to a suspension of 1 g of Amano lipase 30 in 20 mL of 0.05; N phosphate buffer. The resulting slurry was spread on a glass dish and allowed to dry in the air at 23° C. for 48 h (weight 5.4 g; water content about 2% by Fisher method).


Example 9

This example demonstrates the synthesis of (3R,3aS, 6aR)3-hydroxyhexahydrofuro[2,3-b]furan 25 by immobilized lipase catalyzed acylation, as illustrated in FIG. 2.


To a stirred solution of reacemic alcohol 24 (2 g, 15.4 mmol) and acetic anhydride (4 g, 42.4 mmol) in 100 mL of DME was added 2.7 g (about 25% by weight of lipae PS30) of immobilized Amano lipase and the resulting suspension was stirred at 23° C. The reaction was monitored by TLC and 1H NMR analysis until 50% conversion was reached. The reaction mixture was filtered and the filter cake was washed repeatedly with ethyl acetate. The combined filtrate was carefully concentrated in a rotary evaporator, keeping the bath temperature below 15° C. The residue was chromatographed over silica gel to provide 843 mg (42%) of 25 (95% ee; aD23°−11.9°, MeOH); 1H-NMR (CDCl3) d 1.85 (m, 2H), 2.3 (m, 1H), 2.9 (m, 1H), 3.65 (dd, J=7.0, 9.1, 1H), 3.85-4.0 (m, 3H), 4.45 (dd, J=6.8, 14.6, 1H), 5.7 (d, J=5.1, 1H); also, 1.21 g of 26 after washing with 5% aqueous sodium carbonate (45%, aD23°+31.8°, MeOH); 1H-NMR (CDCl3) δ 1.85-2.1 (m, 2H), 2.1 (s, 3H), 3.1 (m, 1H), 3.75 (dd, J=6.6, 9.2, 1H), 3.8-4.1 (m, 3H), 5.2 (dd, J=6.4, 14.5, 1H), 5.7 (d, J=5.2, 1H). Acetate 26 was dissolved in THF (5 mL) and 1 M aqueous LiOH solution (20 mL) was added to it. The resulting mixture was stirred at 23° C. for 3 h and the reaction was extracted with chloroform (3×25 mL). The combined organic layers were dried over anhydrous Na2SO4 and evaporated under reduced pressure. The residue was chromatographed over silica gel to provide 733 mg of 27 (97% ee; αD23°-12.5°, MeOH).


Example 10

This example demonstrates the synthesis of activated carbonates 31 and 33, as illustrated in FIGS. 3A and 3B.


To a stirred solution of [3R,3aS,6aS]-3-hydroxyhexahydrofuro[2,3-b]furan 25 (65 mg, 0.5 mmol) in dry CH3CN (5 mL) at 23° C. were added disuccinimidyl carbonate (192 mg, 0.75 mmol) and triethylamine (0.25 mL). The resulting mixture was stirred at 23° C. for 12 h. The reaction was quenched with saturated aqueous NaHCO3 (10 mL) and the mixture was concentrated under reduced pressure. The residue was extracted with CH2Cl2 (2×25 mL) and the combined organic layers were washed with brine (10 mL) and dried over anhydrous Na2SO4. Evaporation of the solvent under reduced pressure gave a residue, which was chromatographed over silica gel (500 ethyl acetate/hexane) to furnish (3R,3aS,6aR)3-hydroxyhexahydrofuro[2,3-b]furanyl-succinimidyl carbonate 31 (70 mg) as a brown oil. Carbonate 33 (65 mg) was prepared from 60 mg of alcohol 27 by following a similar procedure.


Example 11

This example illustrates the preparation of multidrug-resistant HIV inhibitor 32, as illustrated in FIG. 3A.


To a stirred solution of amine 15 (82 mg, 0.2 mmol) in dry CH2Cl2 (5 mL) was added succinimidyl carbonate 31 (55 mg, 0.18 mmol). The resulting solution was stirred at 23° C. for 12 h. After this period, the reaction was quenched with saturated aqueous NaHCO3 (10 mL) and diluted with CH2Cl2 (25 mL). The layers were separated and the organic layer was washed with brine (15 mL) and dried over anhydrous Na2SO4. Evaporation of the solvent under reduced pressure afforded a residue, which was purified by silica gel chromatography (75% ethyl acetate/hexane) to furnish compound 32 (85 mg) as a white solid (m.p 55-58° C.). 1H-NMR (CDCl3, 400 MHz); δ 7.71 (d, 2H, J=8.8 Hz), 7.29-7.20 (m, 5H), 6.99 (d, 2H, J=7.0 Hz), 5.65 (d, 1H, J=5.19), 5.01 (m, 2H), 3.95-3.82 (m, 7H), 3.69 (m, 2H), 3.0-2.7 (m, 6H), 1.85 (m, 1H), 1.64-1.45 (m, 3H), 0.90 (two d, 6H, J=6.5 Hz, 6.6 Hz).


Example 12

This example illustrates the preparation of multidrug-resistant HIV inhibitor 33, as illustrated in FIG. 3B.


Carbonate 33 (55 mg) was reacted with amine 15 (82 mg, 0.2 mmol) according to the procedure mentioned above to provide compound 34 (81 mg). 1H-NMR (CDCl3, 300 MHz); δ 7.69 (d, 2H, J=8.8 Hz), 7.28-7.21 (m, 5H), 6.87 (d, 2H, J=5.84 Hz), 5.67 (d, 1H, J=5.46 Hz), 5.0 (m, 2H), 3.86-3.81 (m, 7H), 3.58 (dd, 2H, J=6.6 Hz, 3.6 Hz, 3.17-2.73 (m, 6H), 2.17-1.83 (m, 4H), 0.90 (two d, 6H, J=6.5 Hz, 6.6 Hz).


Example 13

This example describes the protocol for the sensitive continuous fluorogenic assay for HIV protease of the present invention and its application. Using this assay, the inhibitory activity of compound 32 (FIG. 3A) was tested against the proteases of wild-type HIV-1 (WT) and various mutant enzymes: D30N, V32I, I84V, V32I/I84V, M46F/V82A, G48V/L90M, V82F/I84V, V82T/I84V, V32I/K45I/F53L/A71V/I84V/L89M, V32I/L33F/K45I/F53L/A71V/I84V, and 20R/36I/54V/71V/82T, which protease enzymes are available from Dr. John W. Erickson, Structural Biochemistry Program, SAIC Frederick, P.O. Box B, Frederick, Md. 21702-1201, upon written request. The inhibition constant for wild-type HIV-1, Kimnt/Kiwt ratio, and vitality were measured. (See Gulnik et al., Biochemistry, 34, 9282-9287 (1995). Protease activity was measured using the fluorgenic substrate Lys-Ala-Arg-Val-Tyr-Phe(NO2)-Glu-Ala-Nle-NH2 (Bachem Bioscience, Inc.). (See Peranteau et al., D.H. (1995) Anal. Biochem.).


Typically, 490 μl of 0.125 M ACES-NaOH buffer, pH 6.2, containing 1.25 M (NH4)2SO4, 6.25 mM DTT and 0.1% PEG-8000 was mixed with 5 μl of titrated protease (final concentration 1-5 nM) and incubated 3 min at 37° C. The reaction was initiated by the addition of 5 μl of substrate stock solution in water. Increase in fluorescence intensity at the emission maximum of 306 nm (excitation wavelength was 277 nm) was monitored as a function of time using Aminco Bowman-2 luminescence spectrometer (SLM Instruments, Inc.). The initial rate of hydrolysis was calculated by second degree polynomial fit using SLM AB2 2.0 operating software. Kinetic parameters were determined by nonlinear regression-fitting of initial rate versus substrate concentration data to the Michaelis-Menten equation using program Enzfiter version 1.05.


For inhibition studies, inhibitors were prepared as stock solutions at different concentrations in dimethylsulfoxide. In a typical experiment 485 μl of 0.125 M ACES-NaOH buffer, pH 6.2, containing 1.25 M (NH4)2SO4, 6.25 mM DTT AND 0.1% PEG-8000, was mixed with 5 μl of inhibitor stock solution and 5 μl of titrated protease (final concentration of 1-5 nM) and preincubated 3 min at 37° C. The reaction was initiated by the addition of 5 μl of substrate stock solution in water. For data analysis, the mathematical model for tight-binding inhibitors was used. (See Williams and Morrison (1979), In: Methods of Enzymol. 63, (ed. D. L. Purich), 437-467, Academic Press, NY, London). The data were fitted by nonlinear regression analysis to the equation: V=V0/2Et({[Ki(l+S/Km)+It−Et]2+4Ki(l+S/Km)Et}1/2−[Ki((l+S/Km)+It−Et]) with the program Enzfiter (version 1.05), where V and V0 are initial velocities with and without inhibitor, respectively, Km is a Michaelis-Menten constant, and S, Et and It are the concentrations of substrate, active enzyme, and inhibitor, respectively. Biochemical fitness for each mutant was determined by comparing the biochemical vitality of each mutant (vitalitymut) with the biochemical vitality of the wild-type reference (vitalitywt), according to the formula





(vitalitymut)/(vitalitywt)


wherein vitality is (Ki)(kcat/KM). The results are shown below in Table 1.









TABLE 1







Compound 32













Ki

Biochemical



Enzyme
(pM)
KI-mut/KI-wt
Fitness
















WT
14
1
1



D30N
<5
0.33
0.3



V32I
8
0.57
0.5



I84V
40
2.85
1



V32I/I84V
70
5
0.7



M46F/V82A
<5
0.33
0.1



G48V/L90M
<5
0.33
0.1



V82F/I84V
7
0.5
0.1



V82T/I84V
22
1.57
0.1



V32I/K45I/F53L/A
31
2.2
0.1



71V/I84V/L89M






V32I/L33F/K45I/F
46
3.3
0.1



53L/A71V/I84V






20R/36I/54V/71V/82T
31
2.2
0.1










The above results demonstrate that compound 32 is a potent inhibitor of multiple HIV protease mutants that contain the primary or key drug resistance mutations. These data predict that compound 32 will have potent and broad-spectrum multidrug-resistant antiretroviral activity. Moreover, the biochemical fitness of each mutant relative to wild type is equal to or less than one in the presence of compound 32. Based on this fitness profile, it is believed that drug resistant viruses containing the characteristic mutations assayed herein will not emerge from the wild-type in the presence of compound 32.


Example 14

This example illustrates the potent and broad-spectrum multidrug-resistant antiretroviral activity of an exemplary compound of the present invention.


Compound 32, shown in FIG. 3A, was tested side-by-side with four other known HIV-1 protease inhibitors against various wild-type HIV-1 strains (HIV-1ERS104pre, HIV-1LAI, and HIV-1BAL), and mutant multidrug-resistant HIV-1 strains clinically isolated from eight different patients who had received numerous antiviral drugs, either singly or in combination. The patients from which the mutant strains were isolated had a history of anti-HIV therapy with a variety of different drugs such as, for example, ritonavir, saquinavir, indinavir, amprenavir, AZT, ddI, ddC, d4T, 3TC, ABV (abacavir), DLV (delaviridine), and PFA (foscarnet). The patient profiles are shown below in Table 2.













TABLE 2





Patient/

HIV-1
Months on



Isolate
CD4+
RNA level
Antiviral
Prior and Present Anti-


Code
(/mm3)
(copies/mL)
Therapy
HIV Therapy



















1
361
246,700
64
AZT, ddI, ddC, d4T, 3TC,






ABV, IDV, RTV, SQV,






AMV, DLV


2
3
553,700
46
AZT, ddI, ddC, d4T, 3TC,






ABV, IDV, SQV, AMV


3
108
42,610
39
AZT, ddI, ddC, d4T, 3TC,






ABV, IDV, SQV, AMV


4
560
60,000
81
AZT, ddI, ddC, U90, d4T,






3TC, ABV, IDV, SQV,






AMV


5


32
AZT, ddI, ddC, d4T, 3TC,






ABV, IDV, SQV, AMV


6


34
AZT, ddI, ddC, d4T, 3TC,






ABV, IDV, SQV, AMV


7


83
AZT, ddI, ddC, d4T, 3TC,






ABV, IDV, SQV, RTV,






AMV


8


69
AZT, ddI, ddC, d4T, 3TC,






PFA, ABV, IDV, SQV,






AMV









The four known chemotherapeutic HIV protease inhibitors used for comparative purposes in this example have been utilized in actual human HIV chemotherapy, and are: Ritonavir (“RTV,” Abbott Laboratories); Indinavir (“IDV,” Merck Research Laboratories); Amprenavir (AMV, See Ghosh et al., Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett., 8, 687-690 (1998)); and Saquinavir (“SAQ”, Roche Research Centre). The IC50 values (μM) for all five compounds were determined with respect to wild-type and multidrug-resistant HIV-1.


To determine protease inhibitory activity against multidrug resistant HIV, the IC50's were measured against a panel of clinically isolated mutant HIV isolates. The IC50's were determined by utilizing the PHA-PBMC exposed to HIV-1 (50 TCID50 dose/1×106 PBMC) as target cells and using the inhibition of p24 Gag protein production as an endpoint.


The IC50's were determined by utilizing the PHA-PBMC assay in which target cells are exposed to HIV-1 (50 TCID50 dose/1×106 PBMC) and inhibition of p24 Gag protein production is used as an endpoint. All drug sensitivities were performed in triplicate. In order to determine whether the HIV isolates were syncitium inducing (SI) or non-syncitium inducing (NSI), an aliquot of viral stock supernatant, containing 100 TCID50, was cultured with 1×105 MT-2 cells in a 12-well plate. Cultures were maintained for four weeks and were examined for syncytium formation twice a week. The results are shown below in Table 3.









TABLE 3







IC50 (μM)














Patient/




Com-


Pheno-
Isolate code




pound


type
(See Table 2)
RTV
IDV
AMV
SAQ
32
















SI
HIV-1ERS104pre
0.055
0.013
0.021
0.01
<0.001


SI
HIV-1LAI
0.0047
0.019
0.019
0.0054
0.0004


NSI
HIV-1BAL
0.018
0.0056
0.014
0.0037
0.0004



1
>1
>1
0.29
0.29
0.002



2
>1
0.24
0.24
0.035
<0.001



3
>1
0.46
0.33
0.036
<0.001



4
>1
0.24
0.4
0.033
0.001


NS1
5
>1
0.8
0.28
0.24
0.002



6
>1
0.37
0.11
0.19
<0.001



7
>1
>1
0.42
0.12
0.004



8
>1
>1
0.22
0.009
0.001









The above IC50's clearly demonstrate the broad-spectrum and extraordinarily potent activity of compound 32 against wild-type HIV-1 and the eight different multidrug-resistant clinical isolates tested as was predicted from the biochemical fitness profiles in Example 13. For example, compound 32 exhibits nanomolar and sub-nanomolar potency against all the multidrug-resistant strains tested, whereas Ritonavir, a reasonably potent wild-type inhibitor, is virtually inactive toward the resistant viruses. Moreover, compound 32 is about 9 to about 150 times more potent against the multidrug-resistant viruses than Saquinavir, one of the most potent known compounds against known multidrug-resistant strains of HIV-1. Patients with viral plasma loads greater than 10,000 RNA copies/mm3 are at risk for developing fatal AIDS complications. There are no effective therapeutic options currently available for these patients infected with these multidrug resistant viruses. Compound 32 and analogs thereof are predicted to be potent in preventing the selection of these viral strains in vivo.


Example 15

This example demonstrates the wild-type antiretroviral activity of the compounds of the present invention.


It is predicted that the activity of the present inventive compounds against wild-type HIV protease correlates with of antiretroviral activity against multidrug-resistant HIV. Numerous compounds of the present invention were tested against wild-type HIV (See, Ghosh et al., J. Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett., 8, 6870690 (1998)). Exemplary compounds, which demonstrate potent wild-type HIV protease activity, are shown below in Table 4.









TABLE 4









embedded image























ID50



A
R3
R5
R6
Ki (nM)
(nM)
Comments


















embedded image


Ph


embedded image




embedded image


2.1
4.5
Compound 32 (FIG. 3A) Compound 34 (FIG. 3B)







embedded image


Ph


embedded image




embedded image


1.1
1.4








embedded image


Ph


embedded image




embedded image












embedded image


Ph


embedded image




embedded image


1.2
3.5








embedded image


Ph


embedded image




embedded image


2.2
4.5








embedded image


Ph


embedded image




embedded image












embedded image




embedded image




embedded image




embedded image












embedded image


Ph


embedded image




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It is believed that the above compounds in Table 4 will prevent the emergence of resistance in an HIV-infected human.


Example 16

This example demonstrates the oral absorption of compound 32 in an in vivo experimental model.


Compound 32 was orally administered to a rat at a dose of about 40 mg per kg body mass, using a PEG 300 vehicle as a carrier. The plasma blood levels of compound 32 were measured over a 24 h period after oral administration. The results are shown in Table 5 below.












TABLE 5









Time After Administration
Plasma Concentration












Hours
Minutes
(nM)
(ng/mL)
















0.28
17
1598
898



1.00
60
878
493



2.07
124
626
352



4.01
240
670
377



6.01
360
594
334



8.05
483
1115
627



12.04
722
246
138



14.08
845
102
57



24.00
1440
82
46










These results demonstrate that compound 32 maintains high blood levels (e.g., nearly 0.6 uM after 6 hours) long after oral administration. Although applicants do not wish to abound by any one particular theory, it is believed that the non-peptide structure of the compounds of the present invention make them less prone to biological (e.g., enzymatic) degradation, and thereby contribute to their prolonged blood levels after oral administration. From these data, the compounds of the present invention are predicted to have excellent oral bioavailability in humans, and maintain therapeutically significant blood levels over prolonged periods after oral administration.


Example 17

This example demonstrates the influence of human protein binding on the antiviral activity of compound 32. Several potent and orally bioavailable HIV protease inhibitors failed to have in vivo antiviral efficacy. These failures have been ascribed, but not definitively proven, to be due to excessive binding to human plasma proteins, particularly serum albumin and AAG. The protein binding against human alpha acid glycoprotein (AAG, 10 μM) and against human serum albumin (HAS, 300 μM) were compared for compound 32 and amprenavir, a structurally related analog that is an FDA approved drug. The results are shown in Table 6.










TABLE 6








IC50 (μM)










Compound
(−)
AAG
Alb





32
0.0015 (1×)
0.0022 (1.5×)
0.003 (2×)


amprenavir
 0.029 (1×)
   0.18 (6×)
0.021 (1×)









These data demonstrate that the presence of AAG and HAS in physiologically excessive amounts does not adversely affect the antiviral activity of compound 32. From these data, the affinity of compound 32 for human AAG and HSA is predicted to be actually lower than that for amprenavir, a known drug. From these data, the compounds of the present invention are expected to have excellent in vivo efficacy in humans, and maintain therapeutically significant levels over prolonged periods of time.


Example 18

This example describes the inhibitory activity of compounds 35 (FIG. 5A), 36 (FIG. 5B), 37 (FIG. 5C) and 38 (FIG. 5D). In accordance with the technique disclosed in Example 13 above, the inhibitory activity of these compounds was tested against proteases of the wild-type HIV-1. Compound 36, 37 and 38 were also tested against proteases containing the deleterious drug resistance associated mutations V82F/I84V and G48V/V82A. Fitness was determined in accordance with Example 13. The results of these experiments are shown below in Table 7.













TABLE 7





COMPOUND
ENZYME
Ki (pM)
KI-wt/KI-mut
Fitness



















35
WT
81
1



36
WT
5<





V82F/I84V
24.4
>4.9
>0.8



G48V/V82A
15.3
>3.0
>0.8


37
WT
12
1




V82F/I84V
25.7
2.1
0.3



G48V/V82A
64
5.3
1.4


38
WT
>5





V82F/I84V
66.8
>13
>2.1



G84V/V82A
34
>6.8
>1.8









These results further demonstrate compounds of the present invention that are potent inhibitors against mutant proteases. Based on the fitness profile, it is believed that drug resistant viruses containing the characteristic mutations assayed herein will not emerge from the wild-type in the presence of compound 37.


Example 19

This example further demonstrates the broad-spectrum and potent activity of exemplary compounds of the present invention against multidrug-resistant clinical isolates.


The IC50 values (μM) for all compounds 32, 35, 36, 37, and 38 were determined with respect to wild type clinical isolates HIV-1LAI and HIV-1BaL. The latter is a monocytotropic strain of HIV.


The IC50's for isolates HIV-1LAI and HIV-1Ba-L were determined by exposing the PHA-simulated PBMC to HIV-1 (50 TCID50 dose/1×106 PBMC), in the precence of various concentrations of compounds 32, 35, 36, 37 and 38, and using the inhibition of p24 Gag protein production as an endpoint on day 7 of culture (“p24 assay”). All drug sensitivities were performed in triplicate. The IC50's for isolate HIV-1LAI were also determined by exposing MT-2 cells (2×103) to 100 TCID50s of HIV-1LAI cultured in the presence of various concentrations of compounds 32, 35, 36, 37 and 38. The IC50's were determined using the MTT assay on day 7 of culture. All sensitivities were determined in duplicate. The results are shown below in Table 8.















TABLE 8






Cell Type/
Comp. 32
Comp. 35
Comp. 36
Comp. 37
Comp. 38


Virus
Assay
IC50 (μM)
IC50 (μM)
IC50 (μM)
IC50 (μM)
IC50 (μM)





















HIV-1LAI
MT-2/MTT
0.00022
0.028
0.017
0.0053
0.028


HIV-1LAI
PBMC/p24
0.00022
0.020
0.034
0.0027
0.0080


HIV-1Ba-L
PBMC/p24
0.00033
0.013
0.038
0.0030
0.0093









These results demonstrate the potent antiretroviral activity of particular compounds of the present invention.


Example 20

This example further illustrates the potent and broad-spectrum multidrug-resistant antiretroviral activity of an exemplary compound of the present invention.


Compound 32, shown in FIG. 3A, was tested against various mutant multidrug-resistant HIV-1 strains clinically isolated from patients. These isolates were all taken from patients who failed therapy on one or more HIV protease inhibitors due to high level clinical resistance. All of these isolates exhibit high level phenotypic resistance in antiviral assays against many of the commonly use HIV protease inhibitor drugs. Compound 32 was tested against these multidrug-resistant clinical isolates side-by-side with known drugs that are commonly used in HIV antiviral therapy, including reverse transcriptase inhibitors such as AZT, 3TC, DDI, DDC, and D4T, and protease inhibitors such as Indinavir (Ind.), Nelfinavir (Nel.), Ritonavir (Rit.), and Saquinavir (Saq.). The IC50's for compound 32 and the comparative drugs against the multidrug-resistant HIV-1 clinical isolates, and against wild-type HIV-1 (WT), are shown in Table 9a.


The mutant multidrug-resistant HIV-1 strains corresponding to each patient, numbered 9-35, were genetically analyzed in terms of the nucleic acid sequences of the protease (PR) and a portion of the reverse transcriptase (RT) genes from which mutations in these enzymes were determined. The mutations in the protease and reverse transcriptase of the multidrug-resistant viruses isolated from each patient are shown below in Table 9b.









TABLE 9a







IC50 (μM)

















Patient












Isolate
AZT
3TC
DDI
DDC
D4T
Ind.
Nel.
Rit.
Saq.
Comp. 32




















9
0.01
0.39
0.7
0.15
0.91
1.087
0.98
0.53
>0.3125
0.0003


10
0.02
1.35
1.7
0.37
1.29
>1.25
>1.25
2.03
>0.3125
0.0017


11
0.11
23.61
2.4
0.18
3.10
0.012
0.03
0.01
0.001
0.0004


12
0.07
0.78
0.9
0.20
1.23
>1.25
>1.25
2.47
>0.3125
0.0010


13
0.17
1.04
0.5
<0.1221
0.78
>1.25
0.47
1.64
>0.3125
0.0004


14
0.64

2.4
<0.1221
1.10
0.089
0.01
0.04
0.040
0.0003


15
0.20
>31.25
2.2
0.32
1.10
0.265
0.47
1.14
>0.3125
0.0011


16
0.97
27.98
3.5
0.57
1.81
0.384
0.86
1.34
>0.3125
0.0031


17
>1.25
28.05

0.63
4.28
0.502
0.52
0.87
0.107
0.0022


18
0.55
>31.25
2.2
0.48
2.08
0.369
0.60
3.02
0.039
0.0019


19
>1.25
>31.25
36.6
6.80
35.63
0.784
0.50
2.94
0.055
0.0005


20
1.25
3.21
7.1
0.57
22.54
0.591
0.58
1.90
0.032


21
>1.25
1.69
1
0.38
3.28
1.250
>1.25
2.18
0.21
0.0023


22
1.02
>31.25
3.7
0.63
4.68
0.173
0.10
0.56
0.003


23
0.19
>31.25
1.8
0.28
1.00
0.461
0.28
1.82
0.008
0.0004


24









0.0004


25









0.0019


26









0.0019


27
0.03
1.72
2.6
0.41
4.00
>1.25
>1.25
2.97
>0.3125
0.0009


28
>1.25
2.08
2.8
0.36
5.44
1.040
>1.25
2.66
>0.3125


29
>1.25
2.24
3.8
0.34
5.29
0.569
0.67
0.36
0.050
0.0009


30
0.16
>31.25
2.8
0.24
2.52
0.270
0.52
1.03
0.191
0.0019


31

>31.25
2.6
<0.1221
3.11
0.251
0.24
0.85
0.074
0.0010


32
0.32
>31.25
8.4
0.91
2.41
0.223
0.22
0.37
>0.3125


33
0.51
>31.25
2.0
0.28
2.73
0.133
0.35
0.18
0.059
0.0005


34
>1.25
>31.25
9.1
1.13
7.71
0.595
0.26
3.38
0.063
0.0024


35
0.88
>31.25
17.0
2.46
18.13
0.509
0.48
2.60
0.0616
0.0012


(WT)
0.022
0.264
0.895
0.243
1.059
0.02
0.031
0.019
0.007
0.0007

















TABLE 9b





Isolate
Mutations





























9
PR
V003I
L010I
S037N
R041K
G048V
I054S
I062V
L063S
1064L
1064L
A071V
V082A
1093L



RT
P004S
V0601
V0901
E122K
I135V
Q174K
Y181C
E194E/K
G196E
R211K
L214F
V245M
R227K




E297R
L301L/I


10
PR
V003I
L010I
S037N
R041K
G048V
I054S
I062V
L063S
1064L
1064L
A071V
V082A
1093L



RT
P004S
V0601
V0901
E122K
I135V
T165A/T
Q174K
Y181C
E194K
G196E
R211K
L214F
H221H/Y




V245M
R277K


11
PR
V003I
L010I
1015V
M036I
S037N
R041K
L063T
I093L



RT
K020R/K
M041L
K043Q
E044D
V060I
D067N
T069D
E122E/K
D123E
Y181C/Y
M184V
G196E
H208Y




L210W
R211K


12
PR
V003I
LQ10I
1015V
K020R
M036I
S037N
R041K
G048V
I054T/I
L063T
A071V
T074A
V082A/V




1093L



RT
M041L
K043Q
E044D
V060I
D067N
T069D
L074L/I
K103N
D123E
I135T
Y181C
G196E
H208Y




L201W
R211K


13
PR
V0031
L010I
1015V
K020R/K
M036I
S037N
R041K
G048V/G
I054T/I
Q058E/Q
Q061R/Q
L063T
A071A/V




1072T/I
T074A/T
V082A
I093L



RT
M041L
K043Q
E044D
V060I
D067N
T069D
L074L/I
K103N
D123E
I135T/I
Y181C
G196E
H208Y




L210W
R211K


14
PR
V003I
L010I
K020R
E035D
M036I
S037D
R041K
G048V
L063C
A071V
1072T
V082A/V
1093L



RT
M041L
T069T/N
L074L/V
E122K
D123E
Y181C
Q207E
L210W
R211K
L214F
T215Y
L228R
E248D




R277K
E297K


15
PR
V003I
L010I
E035D
R041K
L063P
A071A/V
I072V/I
G073R/C
V077I
1084V
L090M
1093L



RT
D067N
T069D
I142V
E169D
Y181C
M184V
Q207B
R211K
L214F
T215Y
D250E
P272A
Q278E




L283I
I293V


16
PR
V003I
L010I
1013V
E035D
S037A
R041K
L063P
A071V
G073S
I084V
L090M



RT
K020R
M041L
K043N
D067N
D123N
D177E
I178M/I
M184V
G196E
E203D
L214F
T215Y
K219Q




R277K
G333E


17
PR
V003I
L0101
1013V
E035D
S037A
R041K
L063P
A071V
G073G/S
I084V
L090M



RT
K020R
M041L
K043N
D067N
D123N
D177E
I178M/I
M184V
G196E
E203D
L214F
T215Y
R277K




G333E
A360T


18
PR
V003I
L010V
S037N
K043T
I054V
L063P
A071V
V082A
L090M



RT
K020R
V035M
K064H
D067G
T069N
K070R
K102R/K
V1118I
E122K
I135T
S162A
M184V
T215S




D128E
K219Q


19
PR
V003I
L010I
L0191
S037Q
M046L
I054V
R057K
L063P
A071V
V082A
L090M



RT
K020R
T058N
A062V
S068G
T069T/I
V075I
F077L
A098S
K103N
F116Y
I135T
I142M
Q151M




Y181C
M184V


20
PR
V003I
L010I
T012P
K014R
I015V/I
G016E
S037N
M046I
I054V
K055R
I062V
L063N
A071T




V077I
V082A
I085V
L090M



RT
K020R
V0351
T039A
M041L
K043E
E044A
D067N
V075A
K103N
V118I
I135M
Y181C
H208Y




L210W
R211K


21
PR
V003I
L010I
1015V
K020R
B035D
M036I
S037K
R041N
K043T/K
M041I
L063P
H609K
A071V




T074S
V082F
N088E
L084M
L090M
I093L



RT
K020R
V035T
T039R
M041L
K043E
E044D
V060I
I063M/I
D067N
T069D
A098G
V118I
D121H




I135T/I
I142V


22
PR
V003I
L010I
E034E/Q
S037H
M046I
I054V
I062V
L063S
V082A
L089L/M



RT
K020R/K
T039A/T
M041L
K043E
E044D
D067N
V118I
M184V
E203E/K
Q207E
H208Y
L210W
R211K




L214F
T215Y


23
PR
V003I
L010I
1015V
K020I
L024I
M036I
S037N
I054V
R057K
L063P
A071V
V082A



RT
K011R
D067N
K070R
I135T
Y181V/D
M184V
D218E/D
K219Q
P272A
R277K
R284R/K
I293V
E297V




M357T/M
G359G/S


24
PR
V003I
I015V
D030N
E035D
S037D
L063P
V077I
N088D



RT
K064R
E122K
D123S
D177E
M184V
G196R
R211G
L214F
V245T/M
E297A
I326V
I329L
T338S




N348I
R358K


25
PR
V003I
K020I
T026T/I
S037N
M046I
L063P
A071V
G073S
V077I
I084V
L090M
I093L



RT
V035M
D067N
T069D
K070R
E122P
D177E
M184V
I202V
Q207E
R211K
L214F
T215F
K219Q




E224K
R277K


26
PR
V003I
L010I
S037N
R041K
G048V
I054S
I062V
L063S
I064L
A071V
V082A
I093L



RT
P004S
V060I
V090I
E122K
I135Y
T135A/T
Q174K
Y181C
E194K
G196E
R211K
L214F
H221H/Y




V245M
R277K


27
PR
V003I
L010I
I015V
K020R
M036I
S037N
R041K
G048V
I054T/I
L063T
A071A/V
T074A
V082A




I093L



RT
M041L
K043Q
E044D
V060I
D067N
T069D
L074L/I
K103N
F116F/L
D123E
I135T
Y181C
G196E




H208Y
L210W


28
PR
V003I
L010I
I015V
M036I
S037D
G048V
I054V
D060E
Q061E
I062V
I064V
A071V
V082A




L090M
I093L



RT
P004S
M041L
D067N
T069D
K070R
V090I
K103N
I135T
S162A
V179I
Y181C
G196E
Q207E




L214F
T215F


29
PR
V003I
L010I
K020I
S037N
M046M/I
L063P
I072I/K
G073C
V077I
L090M



RT
V035I
T039A/E
M041L
E044D
L074L/V
R083K
K102Q
S162C
I178L
E203K
H208Y
L210W
R211K




L214F
T215Y


30
PR
V003I
L010I
E035D
R041K
L063P
A071A/V
I072V/I
G073G/S
V0771
I084V/I
L090M
I093L



RT
D067N
T069D
I142V
E169D
Y181C
M184V
Q207E
R211K
L214F
T215Y
D250E
P272A
Q278E




L283I
I293V


31
PR
V003I
L010L/I
E035D
M036M/I
S037N
M046X
I054V
L063P
I066F
A071V
V082A/T
I084V/I



RT
K032R/K
K064R
D067N
K070R
K103N/K
E122K
Y181F/C
M184V
R211K
L214F
D218E
K219Q
E248D




T286A
I293V


32
PR
V003I
L010I
S037N
G048V
I054V
I062V/I
L063P
A071A/T
V077I
V082A
I093L



RT
K020R
M041L
D123N
I178L
M184V
T200A/T
E203D
Q207E
L210L/W
L214F
T215Y
R277K
T286A




Q334L/Q
T338S/T


33
PR
V003I
L010I
E035D
M036I
S037D
D060E
L063P
I064V
I084V
L090M



RT
M041L/M
D067N
T063T/N
K070R
D177D/E
M184V
I202V
Q207E
L210W
R211K
L214F
T215Y
K219Q




V245T
P272A


34
PR
V003I
L010V
S037N
K043T
I054V
L063P
A071V
V082A
L090M



RT
K020R
V035M
K064H
D067G
T069N
K070R
K102R/K
V1181I
E122K
I13ST
S162A
M184V
T215S




D218E
K219Q


35
PR
V003I
L010I
L019I
S037Q
M046L
I054V
R057K
L063P
A071V
V082A
L090M



RT
K020R
T058N
A062V
S068G
T069T/I
V075I
F077L
A098S
K103N
F116Y
I135T
I142M
Q151M




Y181C
M184V









The results of this experiment further show the effectiveness of an exemplary compound of the present invention against a wide range of viral mutants compared to other well-known inhibitors. These mutant viruses represent a panel of the most broadly cross resistant clinical isolates known to date based on their resistance to therapeutically used HIV protease inhibitors. Compound 32 was consistently potent against all of the clinically isolated mutant viruses tested, and was significantly more potent against these multidrug resistant viruses than the comparative drugs which are currently used in human HIV-1 therapy. Compound 32 was ten to one-thousand times more potent against these viruses than even saquinavir, one of the most potent known compounds against multidrug-resistant HIV-1. Based on the high potency, it is believed that these mutants will not only be inhibited, but also that these mutants would not be able to emerge if the compound is administered to a patient infected with a predecessor virus.


All of the references cited herein, including patents, patent applications, and publications, are hereby incorporated in their entireties by reference.


While this invention has been described with an emphasis upon preferred embodiments, it will be obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art that variations of the preferred embodiments may be used and that it is intended that the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described herein. Accordingly, this invention includes all modifications encompassed within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the following claims.

Claims
  • 1. An assay for determining the biochemical fitness of a biochemical target of a mutant replicating biological entity relative to its predecessor, comprising: obtaining said predecessor,determining the biochemical vitality of said biochemical target of said predecessor in the presence of a compound capable of inhibiting said biochemical target of said predecessor,determining the biochemical vitality of said biochemical target of said mutant replicating biological entity in the presence of said compound, andcomparing the biochemical vitality of said biochemical target of said mutant replicating biological entity relative to the biochemical vitality of said biochemical target of said predecessor.
  • 2-19. (canceled)
  • 20. A method of administering a therapeutic compound that inhibits a biochemical target of a disease-causing replicating biological entity, comprising: identifying at least one mutant capable of evolving from said disease-causing replicating biological entity,determining a first biochemical vitality of said biochemical target of said disease-causing replicating biological entity in the presence of a first compound capable of inhibiting said biochemical target of said disease-causing replicating biological entity,determining a first biochemical vitality of said biochemical target of said mutant replicating biological entity in the presence of said first compound,determining a second biochemical vitality of said biochemical target of said disease-causing replicating biological entity in the presence of at least one additional compound capable of inhibiting said biochemical target of said disease-causing replicating biological entity,determining a second biochemical vitality of said biochemical target of said mutant in the presence of said of at least one additional compound,determining a first biochemical fitness of said biochemical target of said mutant relative to said disease-causing replicating biological entity by comparing the first biochemical vitality of said biochemical target of said mutant with the first biochemical vitality of said biochemical target of said disease-causing replicating biological entity,determining a second biochemical fitness of said biochemical target of said mutant relative to said disease-causing replicating biological entity by comparing the second biochemical vitality of said biochemical target of said mutant with the second biochemical vitality of said biochemical target of said disease-causing replicating biological entity,comparing the first biochemical fitness in the presence of said first compound with the second biochemical fitness in the presence of said at least one additional compound, andadministering, from among said first and said at least one additional compounds, a therapeutic compound which produces the lowest value for said first or said second biochemical fitness,wherein said disease-causing replicating biological entity is less likely to develop resistance in the presence of said therapeutic compound.
  • 21-45. (canceled)
  • 46. A continuous fluorogenic assay for measuring the anti-HIV protease activity of a protease inhibitor, which method comprises: adding a solution of HIV protease to at least a portion of a substrate stock solution, in which the substrate has the formula Ala-Arg-Val-Tyr-Phe(NO2)-Glu-Ala-Nle-NH2, to provide a substrate reaction solution;measuring the fluorescence of said substrate reaction solution at specified time intervals;adding said solution of HIV protease to an inhibitor-substrate solution comprising a protease inhibitor and said substrate stock solution, to provide an inhibitor-substrate reaction solution;measuring the fluorescence of said inhibitor-substrate reaction solution at specified time intervals; andcalculating the initial velocity of said inhibitor-substrate reaction solution by applying the equation: V=V0/2Et({[Ki(l+S/Km)+It−Et]2+4Ki(l+S/Km)Et}1/2−[Ki((l+S/Km)+It−E1]), wherein V is the initial velocity of said inhibitor reaction solution, Vo is the initial velocity of said substrate reaction solution, Km is the Michaelis-Menten constant, S is the concentration of said substrate, Et is the concentration of said protease, and It is the concentration of said inhibitor, wherein the initial velocities indicates the anti-HIV protease activity of said protease inhibitor.
  • 47. A method of preventing the development of drug resistance in an HIV-infected mammal, said method comprising administering to said HIV-infected mammal a drug resistance-inhibiting effective amount of a compound of the formula:
  • 48. (canceled)
  • 49. The method of claim 47, wherein: when R1 is an alkyl, it is a C1-C6 alkyl;when R1 is an alkenyl it is a C2-C6 alkenyl;when R1 is a cycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, an aryl, or a heteroaryl, R1 is a 4-7 membered ring;when R7, R8 or R9 is an unsubstituted alkyl, it is a C1-C6 unsubstituted alkyl;when R7, R8 or R9 is an unsubstituted alkenyl, it is a C2-C6 unsubstituted alkenyl;R3 is a 4-7 membered ring;R11 is a 4-7 membered ring;when R12 or R13 is an unsubstituted alkyl, it is a C1-C6 unsubstituted alkyl;when R12 or R13 is an unsubstituted alkenyl, it is a C2-C6 unsubstituted alkyl;when R14 is a cycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, an aryl, or a heteroaryl, R14 is a 4-7 membered ring;when R6 is a cycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, aryl, or a heteroaryl, R6 is a 4-7 membered ring;when R6 is substituted with a substituent that is an alkyl, an alkylthio, or an alkylamino, the substituent comprises from one to six carbon atoms; andwhen R6 is substituted with a substituent that is a cycloalkyl, a heterocycloalkyl, an aryl, or a heteroaryl, the substituent is a 4-7 membered ring;or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt, a prodrug, or an ester thereof.
  • 50. The method of claim 47, wherein Q is C(O), R2 is H, and W is SO2, or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt, a prodrug, or an ester thereof.
  • 51. The method of claim 47, wherein the compound is represented by the formula:
  • 52. The method of claim 51, wherein said compound is represented by the formula:
  • 53. The method of claim 52, wherein the compound is represented by the formula:
  • 54-62. (canceled)
  • 63. A method of inhibiting a mutant retroviral infection in a mammal infected with a mutant retrovirus, which method comprises administering to the mammal a mutant retroviral-inhibiting effective amount of a compound of the formula:
  • 64. The method of claim 63, wherein the mutant retrovirus is a multidrug-resistant mutant retrovirus.
  • 65. The method of claim 63, wherein the mutant retrovirus is a multidrug-resistant HIV.
  • 66. The method of claim 63, wherein the mutant retrovirus is a multidrug-resistant HIV-1.
  • 67. The method of claim 63, wherein the mutant retrovirus is resistant to at least one antiviral agent selected from the group consisting of ritonavir, indinavir, amprenavir and saquinavir.
  • 68. The method of claim 63, wherein A is of the formula:
  • 69. The method of claim 63, wherein the compound is of the formula:
  • 70. The method of claim 63, wherein the compound is of the formula:
  • 71. The method of claim 47, which comprises further administration of at least one antiviral agent selected from the group consisting of ritonavir, indinavir, amprenavir and saquinavir.
  • 72. The method of claim 71, wherein the one other antiretroviral agent is selected from the group consisting of ritonavir, indinavir, amprenavir, and saquinavir.
Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60090393 Jun 1998 US
Continuations (2)
Number Date Country
Parent 11870931 Oct 2007 US
Child 13933319 US
Parent 09720276 Mar 2001 US
Child 11870931 US